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Systemic Risk: When Interconnections Become Fragile
Abstract:Financial markets are built on interconnection. Banks lend to each other, funds leverage assets across multiple regions, and derivatives link securities that appear unrelated on the surface. This web
Financial markets are built on interconnection. Banks lend to each other, funds leverage assets across multiple regions, and derivatives link securities that appear unrelated on the surface. This web of connections creates efficiency in normal times, but it also builds hidden pathways for contagion. A shock in one corner of the system can ripple across the globe, magnifying losses far beyond its origin.
The collapse of Lehman Brothers in 2008 was the clearest modern example. What began as a bankruptcy in one investment bank cascaded into a worldwide financial crisis. Credit markets froze, mortgage-backed securities collapsed, and global liquidity evaporated. The systemic links between institutions amplified the damage—funds holding supposedly safe assets suddenly faced losses, while companies dependent on credit lines were cut off overnight.
But systemic risk is not confined to the past. Today, it appears in new forms: overleveraged hedge funds, concentrated ETF holdings, shadow banking exposures, and the rise of private credit markets. The Archegos Capital collapse in 2021, while smaller in scale, showed how hidden leverage at a single family office could ripple into multi-billion-dollar losses for global banks.
The danger of systemic risk is that it is often invisible during calm times. Investors may assume that diversification across sectors or geographies provides safety, but interconnections can mean those exposures are far less independent than they appear. Correlation spikes during stress, and assets that seemed unrelated begin to move together, erasing the benefits of diversification.
At FISG, we address this challenge by applying network-based risk modeling. Our approach maps exposures across asset classes, counterparties, and regions, identifying “nodes of fragility” where shocks are most likely to spread. By simulating contagion scenarios, we provide investors with insights into how their portfolios might behave if systemic cracks emerge. This allows for proactive adjustments—whether through reducing concentration, enhancing liquidity buffers, or restructuring leverage.
Ultimately, systemic risks may be invisible in calm times, but when turbulence strikes, they decide who survives. Building resilience is no longer optional—it is an essential strategy for long-term capital preservation.
Disclaimer:
The views in this article only represent the author's personal views, and do not constitute investment advice on this platform. This platform does not guarantee the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of the information in the article, and will not be liable for any loss caused by the use of or reliance on the information in the article.
