Péter Csóka – P. Jean-Jacques Herings
European Journal of Operational Research – Available online 16 April 2025
Highlights
- We study a bankruptcy rule for financial networks using bilateral netting.
- Avoids specific types of defaults of the proportional rule.
- Axiomatized by net impartiality, invariance to mitosis and basic axioms.
- Also axiomatized by invariance to proportional splitting without continuity.
- The axioms of net impartiality and invariance to proportional splitting are new.
Abstract
We consider financial networks where agents are linked to each other via mutual liabilities. In case of bankruptcy, one needs to distribute the assets of bankrupt agents over the other agents. One common approach is to first apply pairwise netting of mutual liabilities and next use the proportional rule to determine the payments based on the net liabilities. We refer to this as the pairwise netting proportional rule. The pairwise netting proportional rule satisfies the basic requirements of claims boundedness, limited liability, priority of creditors, and continuity. It also satisfies the desirable properties of net impartiality, an agent that has two creditors with the same net claim pays the same amount to both creditors on top of pairwise netting, and invariance to mitosis, an agent that splits into a number of identical agents is not affecting the payments of the other agents. We first demonstrate that if net impartiality and invariance to mitosis, together with the basic requirements, are regarded as imperative properties, then payments should be determined by the pairwise netting proportional rule. We also obtain a second axiomatization by dropping the continuity requirement and replacing invariance to mitosis by the axiom of invariance to proportional splitting, a proportional assignment of the assets and liabilities of an agent to a newly created agent, should not affect the payments of the other agents.
JEL classification: C71, G10
Keywords: Interfaces with other disciplines, Financial networks, Systemic risk, Portfolio compression, Clearing