We present a model of credit market sentiment in which investors form beliefs about future creditworthiness by extrapolating past defaults. Our key contribution is to model the endogenous two-way feedback between credit market sentiment and credit market outcomes. This feedback arises because investors’ beliefs depend on past defaults, but beliefs also drive future defaults through investors’ willingness to refinance debt at low interest rates. Our model is able to capture many documented features of credit booms and busts, including the link between credit growth and future returns, and the “calm before the storm” periods in which fundamentals have deteriorated but the credit market has not yet turned
A measure of heterogeneous beliefs based on the high-frequency credit market information is associat...
Financial markets are subject to sentiment from within and beyond their nation's borders. Fund flows...
We analyse the relationship between large cap returns and sentiment indexes, using a Capital Asset P...
This paper investigates the role of credit market sentiments and investor beliefs on credit cycle dy...
This paper extends Matsuyama's endogenous credit cycle model to account for recent findings on the r...
Recessions are often accompanied by spikes of corporate default and prolonged declines of business c...
Mainstream neoclassical economics predicts that financial markets will operate in a frictionless man...
The paper presents a model of housing and credit cycles featuring distorted beliefs and comovement a...
This paper examines one of the major problems in credit risk models widely used in the financial ind...
In 2007, abuses in the U.S. mortgage industry precipitated a financial crisis that led regulators in...
We quantitatively analyze consumer credit markets with behavioral consumersand default. Our model in...
We develop a dynamic model of debt contracts with adverse selection and belief updates. In the model...
Recent empirical research in finance has uncovered two families of pervasive regularities: underreac...
Habits and sentiment are important psychological behaviors in asset pricing. In this article I nest ...
[Abstract] In this paper we provide a dynamic model of banking competition where bounded rationality...
A measure of heterogeneous beliefs based on the high-frequency credit market information is associat...
Financial markets are subject to sentiment from within and beyond their nation's borders. Fund flows...
We analyse the relationship between large cap returns and sentiment indexes, using a Capital Asset P...
This paper investigates the role of credit market sentiments and investor beliefs on credit cycle dy...
This paper extends Matsuyama's endogenous credit cycle model to account for recent findings on the r...
Recessions are often accompanied by spikes of corporate default and prolonged declines of business c...
Mainstream neoclassical economics predicts that financial markets will operate in a frictionless man...
The paper presents a model of housing and credit cycles featuring distorted beliefs and comovement a...
This paper examines one of the major problems in credit risk models widely used in the financial ind...
In 2007, abuses in the U.S. mortgage industry precipitated a financial crisis that led regulators in...
We quantitatively analyze consumer credit markets with behavioral consumersand default. Our model in...
We develop a dynamic model of debt contracts with adverse selection and belief updates. In the model...
Recent empirical research in finance has uncovered two families of pervasive regularities: underreac...
Habits and sentiment are important psychological behaviors in asset pricing. In this article I nest ...
[Abstract] In this paper we provide a dynamic model of banking competition where bounded rationality...
A measure of heterogeneous beliefs based on the high-frequency credit market information is associat...
Financial markets are subject to sentiment from within and beyond their nation's borders. Fund flows...
We analyse the relationship between large cap returns and sentiment indexes, using a Capital Asset P...