Privacy-Preserving Methods for Sharing Financial Risk Exposures
Author(s)
Abbe, Emmanuel A.; Khandani, Amir Ehsan; Lo, Andrew W.
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The financial industry relies on trade secrecy to protect its business processes and methods, which can obscure critical financial risk exposures from regulators and the public. Using results from cryptography, we develop computationally tractable protocols for sharing and aggregating such risk exposures that protect the privacy of all parties involved, without the need for trusted third parties. Financial institutions can share aggregate statistics such as Herfindahl indexes, variances, and correlations without revealing proprietary data. Potential applications include: privacy-preserving real-time indexes of bank capital and leverage ratios; monitoring delegated portfolio investments; financial audits; and public indexes of proprietary trading strategies.
Date issued
2012-05Department
Sloan School of Management; Sloan School of Management. Laboratory for Financial EngineeringJournal
American Economic Review
Publisher
American Economic Association
Citation
Abbe, Emmanuel A., Amir E. Khandani, and Andrew W. Lo. "Privacy-Preserving Methods for Sharing Financial Risk Exposures." American Economic Review, 102(3): 65-70 (2012).
Version: Original manuscript
ISSN
0002-8282
1944-7981