English

Computing Tarski Fixed Points in Financial Networks

Data Structures and Algorithms 2026-02-19 v1 Computer Science and Game Theory Risk Management

Abstract

Modern financial networks are highly connected and result in complex interdependencies of the involved institutions. In the prominent Eisenberg-Noe model, a fundamental aspect is clearing -- to determine the amount of assets available to each financial institution in the presence of potential defaults and bankruptcy. A clearing state represents a fixed point that satisfies a set of natural axioms. Existence can be established (even in broad generalizations of the model) using Tarski's theorem. While a maximal fixed point can be computed in polynomial time, the complexity of computing other fixed points is open. In this paper, we provide an efficient algorithm to compute a minimal fixed point that runs in strongly polynomial time. It applies in a broad generalization of the Eisenberg-Noe model with any monotone, piecewise-linear payment functions and default costs. Moreover, in this scenario we provide a polynomial-time algorithm to compute a maximal fixed point. For networks without default costs, we can efficiently decide the existence of fixed points in a given range. We also study claims trading, a local network adjustment to improve clearing, when networks are evaluated with minimal clearing. We provide an efficient algorithm to decide existence of Pareto-improving trades and compute optimal ones if they exist.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2602.16387,
  title  = {Computing Tarski Fixed Points in Financial Networks},
  author = {Leander Besting and Martin Hoefer and Lars Huth},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2602.16387},
  year   = {2026}
}

Comments

Full version of extended abstract in STACS 2026

R2 v1 2026-07-01T10:41:11.980Z