Outdated browser

You are using an outdated browser. DNB.nl works best with:

Know your (holding) limits: CBDC, financial stability and central bank reliance

Working paper 771
Working Papers

Published: 20 March 2023

How do central bank digital currencies (CBDC) impact the balance sheets of banks and central banks? To tackle this question empirically, we built a constraint optimisation model that allows for individual banks to choose how to respond to outflows of deposits, based on cost considerations and subject to the availability of reserves and collateral, within the individual banks and system wide, and for a given level of liquidity risk tolerance. We simulate the impact of a fictitious digital euro introduction in the third quarter of 2021, using data from over 2,000 euro area banks. That impact depends on i) the number of deposits withdrawn and the speed at which this occurs, ii) the liquidity available within the banking system at the time of the digital euro introduction, iii) the liquidity risk preferences of the markets and supervisors, iv) the bank’s business model, and v) the functioning of the interbank market. We find that a €3,000 digital euro holding limit per person, as suggested by Bindseil (2020) and Bindseil and Panetta (2020), would have been successful in containing the impact on bank liquidity risks and funding structures and on the Eurosystem balance sheet, even in extremely pessimistic scenarios.

Keywords: digital currency; financial intermediation; financial stability; liquidity risk
JEL codes E52; E58; G21

Working paper no. 771

771 - Know your (holding) limits: CBDC, financial stability and central bank reliance

847KB PDF
Download 771 - Know your (holding) limits: CBDC, financial stability and central bank reliance

Research highlights:

  • We propose a model to study how the balance sheets of banks and of the central bank may be impacted by a Central Bank Digital Currency.
  • Using euro area bank balance sheet data, we simulate the impact of a fictitious digital euro introduction in Q3-2021.
  • We find that with a €3,000 holding limit the impact on banks’ liquidity risk and funding structure and on the Eurosystem balance sheet would have been contained, even in extremely pessimistic scenarios.
  • Re-running our analysis before a digital euro introduction can help assessing whether the timing and holding limit are prudent.

Discover related articles