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Stress testing in Latin America: A comparison of approaches and methodologies

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  • Bank for International Settlements

Abstract

This report describes how major Latin American central banks conduct and use stress tests in assessing the soundness of their banking systems. Methodologies are compared with the help of a common stress-testing exercise run by the central banks participating in the study group. In general, central banks use top-down solvency tests to assess similar risks, but their tests differ, among other things, in the severity of assumed scenarios, assumptions about bank reaction to shocks, data granularity, and how banking indicators are calculated, the latter due to the fact that countries follow different Basel standards. As highlighted by the common exercise, differences across tests can lead to very dissimilar results and policy implications. The report also discusses how stress tests are communicated. Most central banks make stress tests public, but usually only disclose aggregate results. Furthermore, central banks do not normally measure the effectiveness of communication since stress tests are not commonly used as a policy tool.

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  • Bank for International Settlements, 2020. "Stress testing in Latin America: A comparison of approaches and methodologies," BIS Papers, Bank for International Settlements, number 108.
  • Handle: RePEc:bis:bisbps:108
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    References listed on IDEAS

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