This paper extends Matsuyama's endogenous credit cycle model to account for recent findings on the role of credit market sentiments. The benchmark model uses a parsimonious financial friction specification in the form of a pledgeability parameter, which indicates how much of the revenue borrowers can pledge for credit. We endogenize this parameter by introducing behavioral aspects of credit markets. Depending on the current level of net worth the credit market sentiment may change. If a critical net worth threshold is passed, a switch from an optimistic to a pessimistic regime occurs. Lenders’ perception of risk and the pledgeability parameter will vary accordingly. The resulting dynamic law of motion is two-dimensional and discontinuous. W...
A measure of heterogeneous beliefs based on the high-frequency credit market information is associat...
In a behavioral variant of a New Keynesian model, in which individuals use simple heuristic rules to...
We present a model of credit cycles arising from diagnostic expectations—a belief formation mechanis...
This paper extends Matsuyama's endogenous credit cycle model to account for recent findings on the r...
This paper investigates the role of credit market sentiments and investor beliefs on credit cycle dy...
We present a model of credit market sentiment in which investors form beliefs about future creditwor...
We revisit the model of endogenous credit cycles by Matsuyama (2013, Sections 2-4). First, we show t...
Abstract: The contribution of this paper is twofold. First, it reformulates the model of endogenous...
Recessions are often accompanied by spikes of corporate default and prolonged declines of business c...
This paper builds models of nonlinear dynamics in the aggregate investment and borrower net worth an...
We study models of credit with limited commitment, which implies endogenous borrowing constraints. W...
We present a model of credit cycles arising from diagnostic expectations – a belief formation mechan...
This paper builds models of nonlinear dynamics in the aggregate investment and borrower net worth to...
In this paper we study the credit cycle in a theoretical context of inside money and, consequentiall...
We develop a simple model of credit market imperfections, in which the agents have access to a varie...
A measure of heterogeneous beliefs based on the high-frequency credit market information is associat...
In a behavioral variant of a New Keynesian model, in which individuals use simple heuristic rules to...
We present a model of credit cycles arising from diagnostic expectations—a belief formation mechanis...
This paper extends Matsuyama's endogenous credit cycle model to account for recent findings on the r...
This paper investigates the role of credit market sentiments and investor beliefs on credit cycle dy...
We present a model of credit market sentiment in which investors form beliefs about future creditwor...
We revisit the model of endogenous credit cycles by Matsuyama (2013, Sections 2-4). First, we show t...
Abstract: The contribution of this paper is twofold. First, it reformulates the model of endogenous...
Recessions are often accompanied by spikes of corporate default and prolonged declines of business c...
This paper builds models of nonlinear dynamics in the aggregate investment and borrower net worth an...
We study models of credit with limited commitment, which implies endogenous borrowing constraints. W...
We present a model of credit cycles arising from diagnostic expectations – a belief formation mechan...
This paper builds models of nonlinear dynamics in the aggregate investment and borrower net worth to...
In this paper we study the credit cycle in a theoretical context of inside money and, consequentiall...
We develop a simple model of credit market imperfections, in which the agents have access to a varie...
A measure of heterogeneous beliefs based on the high-frequency credit market information is associat...
In a behavioral variant of a New Keynesian model, in which individuals use simple heuristic rules to...
We present a model of credit cycles arising from diagnostic expectations—a belief formation mechanis...