Recessions are often accompanied by spikes of corporate default and prolonged declines of business credit. This paper argues that credit and default cycles are the outcomes of variations in self-fulfilling beliefs about credit market conditions. We develop a tractable macroeconomic model in which leverage ratios and interest spreads are determined in optimal credit contracts that reflect the expected default risk of borrowing forms. We calibrate the model to evaluate the impact of sunspots and fundamental shocks on the credit market and on output dynamics. Self-fulfilling changes in credit market expectations trigger sizable reactions in default rates and generate endogenously persistent credit and output cycles. All credit market shocks to...
Standard macroeconomic models imply that credit spreads directly reect expected losses (the probabil...
Embedded in canonical macroeconomic models is the assumption of frictionless fi-nancial markets, imp...
There has been increasing support in the empirical literature that both the probability of default (...
Recessions are often accompanied by spikes of corporate default and prolonged declines of business c...
Are exogenous shocks to lending spreads in corporate credit markets a substantial source of macroeco...
Several recent papers have found that exogenous shocks to lending spreads in cor-porate credit marke...
In U.S. data 1981–2012, unsecured firm credit moves procyclically and tends to lead GDP, while secur...
Various economic theories are available to explain the existence of credit and default cycles. There...
We model 1927-1997 US business failure rates using an unobserved components time series model. Clear...
We use an intensity-based framework to study the relation between macroeconomic fundamentals and cyc...
A growing literature shows that credit indicators forecast aggregate real outcomes. While researcher...
We incorporate long-term defaultable corporate bonds and credit risk in a dynamic stochastic general...
In the aftermath of the recent financial crisis, the way credit risk is affected by and affects the...
We start by presenting a reduced-form multiple default type of model and derive ab-stract results on...
This paper investigates the role of credit market sentiments and investor beliefs on credit cycle dy...
Standard macroeconomic models imply that credit spreads directly reect expected losses (the probabil...
Embedded in canonical macroeconomic models is the assumption of frictionless fi-nancial markets, imp...
There has been increasing support in the empirical literature that both the probability of default (...
Recessions are often accompanied by spikes of corporate default and prolonged declines of business c...
Are exogenous shocks to lending spreads in corporate credit markets a substantial source of macroeco...
Several recent papers have found that exogenous shocks to lending spreads in cor-porate credit marke...
In U.S. data 1981–2012, unsecured firm credit moves procyclically and tends to lead GDP, while secur...
Various economic theories are available to explain the existence of credit and default cycles. There...
We model 1927-1997 US business failure rates using an unobserved components time series model. Clear...
We use an intensity-based framework to study the relation between macroeconomic fundamentals and cyc...
A growing literature shows that credit indicators forecast aggregate real outcomes. While researcher...
We incorporate long-term defaultable corporate bonds and credit risk in a dynamic stochastic general...
In the aftermath of the recent financial crisis, the way credit risk is affected by and affects the...
We start by presenting a reduced-form multiple default type of model and derive ab-stract results on...
This paper investigates the role of credit market sentiments and investor beliefs on credit cycle dy...
Standard macroeconomic models imply that credit spreads directly reect expected losses (the probabil...
Embedded in canonical macroeconomic models is the assumption of frictionless fi-nancial markets, imp...
There has been increasing support in the empirical literature that both the probability of default (...