Underpriced Default Spread Exacerbates Market Crashes
Author(s) -
Winston T. H. Koh,
Roberto S. Mariano,
Andrey D. Pavlov,
SockYong Phang,
Augustine H. H. Tan,
Susan M. Wächter
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
ssrn electronic journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1556-5068
DOI - 10.2139/ssrn.910964
Subject(s) - business , financial system , economics , monetary economics
In this paper, we develop a specific observable symptom of a banking system that underprices the default spread in non-recourse asset-backed lending. Using three different data sets for 18 countries and property types, we find that, following a negative demand shock, the underpricing economies experience far deeper asset market crashes than economies in which the put option is correctly priced. Furthermore, only one of the countries in our sample continues to exhibit the underpricing symptom following a market crash. This indicates that market crashes have a cleansing effect and eliminate underpricing at least for a period of time. This makes investing in such markets safer following a negative demand shock.
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