Yes, failures do happen. Not even the best of the banking regulators in the world get all failures, right. Even the Federal Reserve got the housing crisis wrong. The question here is - are we learning from these mistakes, do we have the capacity to fix the failures and reduce the likelihood of their recurrence? The RBI’s financial stability report has been flagging some of the risks regularly. Now we have to address them. We have not been able to do so in a decisive manner so far. We need to question, diagnose, and then fix things. The central bank should adopt a supervisory specialised carder, use big data analytics and risk management techniques, besides onsite supervision. The central bank should adopt regulatory stress tests that needs to be embedded in the supervision and the regulatory framework. The stress tests should clarify how much capital needs to be raised by banks ahead of time so that the bridge can withstand crises.