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Flexibility costs of debt: Danish exporters during the cartoon crisis J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2023-03-20 Benjamin U. Friedrich, Michał Zator
We study how firms respond to an unexpected demand shock, exploiting the 2006 boycott of Danish products after publication of Muhammad caricatures. On average, affected firms lose the majority of their exports to Muslim countries and experience a significant decrease in total sales. However, firms with low financial leverage redirect sales to new and existing product-destination markets in non-Muslim
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Barking up the wrong tree: Return-chasing in 401(k) plans J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2023-03-09 Anh Tran, Pingle Wang
This paper examines investors’ retirement savings allocation using a hand-collected dataset on 401(k) plans. We find that 83% of investors in our sample hold only 39% of total assets and follow a return-chasing strategy. In contrast, the remaining 17% of wealthy investors with relatively higher financial literacy follow CAPM alpha. This difference between the two investor groups explains why fund flows
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Set it and forget it? Financing retirement in an age of defaults J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2023-03-06 Lucas Goodman, Anita Mukherjee, Shanthi Ramnath
Retirement savings abandonment is a rising concern connected to defined contribution systems and default enrollment. We use tax data on Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) to establish that for a recent cohort, 0.4% of retirement-age individuals abandoned an aggregate of $66 million, proxied by a failure to claim over ten years after a legal requirement to do so. Analysis of state unclaimed property
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The global factor structure of exchange rates J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2023-03-01 Sofonias Alemu Korsaye, Fabio Trojani, Andrea Vedolin
We propose a model-free methodology to estimate international stochastic discount factors (SDFs) that jointly price cross-sections of international stocks, bonds, and currencies in markets with frictions. We theoretically establish a SDF decomposition into one global factor and a currency basket. We show that our global factor prices a large cross-section of international asset returns, not just in-
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The Modern Mutual Fund Family J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2023-02-28 Caitlin D. Dannhauser, Harold D. Spilker
Modern mutual fund families include more than active mutual funds (AMFs). AMFs in families with greater index mutual fund (IMF) presence generate higher category-adjusted gross returns. Performance is positively related to the levels of passive and active fees, suggesting moral hazard. Intrafamily competition from IMFs in the same Morningstar category incentivizes managers to exert effort. Financial
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The negativity bias and perceived return distributions: Evidence from a pandemic J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2023-02-16 Richard Sias, Laura T. Starks, H.J. Turtle
We hypothesize that the well-documented negativity bias, the psychological tendency to asymmetrically emphasize negative over positive aspects, can help explain several financial market phenomena: why most individuals hold strongly bearish views of both short- and long-term equity return distributions, why individuals exhibit heterogeneous beliefs, and the stock market participation puzzle. Using variation
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Supporting small firms through recessions and recoveries J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2023-02-13 Diana Bonfim, Cláudia Custódio, Clara Raposo
We use variation in the access to a government credit certification program to estimate the financial and real effects of supporting small firms. This program was first implemented during the global financial crisis, but has remained active ever since, allowing us to analyze its effects both during recessions and recoveries. Eligible firms have access to government loan guarantees and a credit quality
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Financial markets and unemployment J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2023-02-02 Tommaso Monacelli, Vincenzo Quadrini, Antonella Trigari
We study the importance of financial markets for (un)employment fluctuations in a model with matching frictions where firms borrow under limited enforcement. Borrowing affects employment through a ‘debt bargaining channel’: higher debt improves the bargaining position of employers with workers and increases the incentive to hire. We estimate the model structurally and find that the debt bargaining
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Volatility and informativeness J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2023-01-27 Eduardo Dávila, Cecilia Parlatore
This paper studies the relation between volatility and informativeness in financial markets. We identify two channels (noise-reduction and equilibrium-learning) that determine the volatility-informativeness relation. When informativeness is sufficiently high (low), volatility and informativeness positively (negatively) comove in equilibrium. We identify conditions on primitives that guarantee that
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From patriarchy to partnership: Gender equality and household finance J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2023-01-28 Luigi Guiso, Luana Zaccaria
We obtain a model-driven measure of gender norms on intra-household financial decision making by leveraging dramatic variation across Italian cohorts and regions in the gender of the household head. We use these estimates to identify the effects of gender parity on household financial decisions. More egalitarian norms increase household participation in financial markets, equity holdings, asset diversification
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The colour of finance words J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2023-01-18 Diego García, Xiaowen Hu, Maximilian Rohrer
Our paper relies on stock price reactions to colour words, in order to provide new dictionaries of positive and negative words in a finance context. We extend the machine learning algorithm of Taddy (2013), adding a cross-validation layer to avoid over-fitting. In head-to-head comparisons, our dictionaries outperform the standard bag-of-words approach (Loughran and McDonald, 2011) when predicting stock
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Mortgage prepayment, race, and monetary policy J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2023-01-14 Kristopher Gerardi, Paul S. Willen, David Hao Zhang
Black and Hispanic homeowners pay significantly higher mortgage interest rates than white and Asian homeowners. We show that the main reason is that white and Asian borrowers are much more likely to exploit periods of falling interest rates by refinancing their mortgages or moving. Black and Hispanic borrowers face challenges refinancing because, on average, they have lower credit scores, equity and
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Common ownership and innovation efficiency J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2023-01-13 Xuelin Li, Tong Liu, Lucian A. Taylor
How does common ownership affect innovation? We study this question using project-level data on pharmaceutical startups and their venture capital (VC) investors. We find that common ownership leads VCs to hold back projects, withhold funding, and redirect innovation at lagging startups. Effects are stronger where R&D costs are larger, consistent with common owners aiming to cut duplicate costs. Effects
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Open banking: Credit market competition when borrowers own the data J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-12-29 Zhiguo He, Jing Huang, Jidong Zhou
Open banking facilitates data sharing consented to by customers who generate the data, with the regulatory goal of promoting competition between traditional banks and challenger fintech entrants. We study lending market competition when sharing banks’ customer transaction data enables better borrower screening for fintechs. Open banking promotes competition if it helps level the playing field for all
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Pirates without borders: The propagation of cyberattacks through firms’ supply chains J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-12-26 Matteo Crosignani, Marco Macchiavelli, André F. Silva
This paper examines the supply chain effects of the most damaging cyberattack in history so far. The attack propagated from the directly hit firms to their customers, causing a four-fold amplification of the initial drop in profits. These losses were larger for affected customers with fewer alternative suppliers. Internal liquidity buffers and increased borrowing, mainly through bank credit lines,
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Dynamic asset (mis)pricing: Build-up versus resolution anomalies J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-12-19 Jules H. van Binsbergen, Martijn Boons, Christian C. Opp, Andrea Tamoni
We classify asset pricing anomalies into those exacerbating mispricing (build-up anomalies) and those resolving it (resolution anomalies). We estimate the dynamics of price wedges for well-known anomaly portfolios and map them to firm-level mispricings. We find that several prominent anomalies like momentum and profitability further dislocate prices. Multi-factor models designed to eliminate one-month
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The fundamental-to-market ratio and the value premium decline J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-12-16 Andrei S. Gonçalves, Gregory Leonard
Recent evidence indicates the value premium declined over time. We argue this decline happened because book equity, BE, is no longer a good proxy for fundamental equity, FE, defined as the present value of cash flows under a common discount rate across firms. Specifically, we estimate FE for public US firms over time and find that the premium associated with the fundamental-to-market ratio, FE/ME,
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Institutional investors, heterogeneous benchmarks and the comovement of asset prices J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-12-13 Andrea M. Buffa, Idan Hodor
We study the equilibrium implications of a multi-asset economy in which asset managers performance is tied to different benchmarks, reflecting heterogeneity in their investment mandates. Fluctuations in the capital asset managers invest for benchmarking purposes, scaled by the size of the economy, induce price pressure that results in negative spillovers across assets. We characterize a rich structure
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Empirical evaluation of overspecified asset pricing models J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-12-05 Elena Manresa, Francisco Peñaranda, Enrique Sentana
Empirical asset pricing models with possibly unnecessary risk factors are increasingly common. Unfortunately, they can yield misleading statistical inferences. Unlike previous studies, we estimate the identified set of SDFs and risk prices compatible with a given model’s asset pricing restrictions. We also propose tests that detect problematic situations with economically meaningless SDFs unrelated
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Refusing the best price? J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-11-28 Sida Li, Mao Ye, Miles Zheng
The Regulation National Market System (Reg NMS) links fragmented stock exchanges by routing orders to the National Best Bid and Offer (NBBO). As the NBBO ignores exchange fees, 62% of routings lead to worse net prices. An increase in fee differences increases the market share captured by orders that refuse Reg NMS routings, particularly for stocks whose fees account for a large portion of transaction
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Automation and the displacement of labor by capital: Asset pricing theory and empirical evidence J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-11-24 Jiří Knesl
I examine the asset pricing implications of technological innovations that allow capital to displace labor: automation. I develop a theory in which firms with displaceable labor are negatively exposed to such technology shocks. In the model, firms optimally adopt technology to gain competitive advantage but in equilibrium competition erodes profits and decreases firm value. Empirically, I find that
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The distributional effects of student loan forgiveness J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-11-24 Sylvain Catherine, Constantine Yannelis
We study the distributional consequences of student debt forgiveness in present value terms, accounting for differences in repayment behavior across the earnings distribution. Full or partial forgiveness is regressive because high earners took larger loans, but also because, for low earners, balances greatly overstate the benefits of debt cancellation. Consequently, forgiveness would benefit the top
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Collateral quality and intervention traps J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-11-16 Michael Junho Lee, Daniel Neuhann
What determines the supply of good collateral? We study a dynamic model in which borrowers must exert effort to maintain collateral quality and markets become illiquid when average quality is too low. Average quality grows quickly when it is high initially, but deteriorates or grows slowly otherwise. As such, even long-run market conditions are sensitive to a wide array of fundamental and non-fundamental
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Presidential economic approval rating and the cross-section of stock returns J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-11-07 Zilin Chen, Zhi Da, Dashan Huang, Liyao Wang
We construct a monthly presidential economic approval rating (PEAR) index from 1981 to 2019, by averaging ratings on the president’s handling of the economy across various national polls. In the cross-section, stocks with high betas to changes in the PEAR index significantly under-perform those with low betas by 1.00% per month in the future, on a risk-adjusted basis. The low PEAR beta premium persists
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Do firms with specialized M&A staff make better acquisitions? J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-11-01 Sinan Gokkaya, Xi Liu, René M. Stulz
We open the black box of the M&A decision process by examining whether specialized M&A staff, who perform a wide range of acquisition-related functions, improve acquisition performance. We find that the presence and the quality of specialized M&A staff is one of the most economically important determinants of acquisition performance. We explore mechanisms through which specialized M&A staff improve
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Small and vulnerable: SME productivity in the great productivity slowdown J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-10-28 Sophia Chen, Do Lee
We show that the TFP growth of European micro, small, and medium-sized firms (SMEs) diverged from large firms after the global financial crisis. The average postcrisis TFP growth of medium-sized, small, and micro firms was, respectively, 1.1, 2.9, and 5.4 percentage points lower than that of large firms. This SME productivity gap is larger for firms with more severe credit supply shocks. The gap is
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What do outside CEOs really do? Evidence from plant-level data J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-10-27 John (Jianqiu) Bai, Anahit Mkrtchyan
Using rich plant-level data, we analyze the relative performance of firms with inside and outside CEOs. We show that firms with outside CEOs achieve greater productivity improvements compared to firms with inside CEOs. Contrary to conventional wisdom, the relation is stronger in well-performing, rather than poorly performing, firms. Although part of the productivity growth differential comes from divesting
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What are the events that shake our world? Measuring and hedging global COVOL J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-10-17 Robert F. Engle, Susana Campos-Martins
Some events impact volatilities of most assets, asset classes, sectors and countries, causing serious damage to investment portfolios. The magnitude of such shocks is defined as global COVOL which is an abbreviation for global common volatility, a broad measure of all types of global financial risk. This paper introduces a statistical formulation of such events as common volatility innovations in both
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Origins of international factor structures J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-10-19 Zhengyang Jiang, Robert J. Richmond
We show that exchange rate correlations tend to be explained by the global trade network while consumption correlations tend to be explained by productivity correlations. Sharing common trade linkages with other countries increases exchange rate correlations beyond bilateral linkages. We explain these findings using a model of the global trade network with market segmentation. Interdependent global
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Shale shocked: Cash windfalls and household debt repayment J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-10-13 J. Anthony Cookson, Erik P. Gilje, Rawley Z. Heimer
Using individual credit bureau data matched with cash windfalls from fracking, we estimate that windfall recipients reduce debt-to-income by 2.4 percentage points relative to no-windfall controls. Debt repayment effects are 3 times stronger for subprime individuals than for prime individuals. Based on the timing of upfront versus continuing cash payments, debt repayment coincides with the timing of
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Product market strategy and corporate policies J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-10-14 Jakub Hajda, Boris Nikolov
We examine how product life cycle affects investment and financing by estimating an industry equilibrium model that embeds product portfolio characteristics. In the model, firms trade off higher profitability of newer products versus product introduction costs. Using product-level data, we find that the product dimension is critical in quantitatively explaining cash flow dynamics, corporate policies
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Capital forbearance in the bank recovery and resolution game J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-10-07 Natalya Martynova, Enrico Perotti, Javier Suarez
We analyze the strategic interaction between undercapitalized banks and a supervisor in a recovery and resolution framework in which early recapitalizations can prevent later disorderly failures. Capital forbearance emerges because reputational, political, economic and fiscal costs undermine supervisors’ commitment to publicly resolve the banks that miss the request to privately recover. Under a weaker
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Monetary policy expectation errors J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-09-29 Maik Schmeling, Andreas Schrimpf, Sigurd A.M. Steffensen
How are financial markets pricing the monetary policy outlook? We use surveys to decompose excess returns on money market instruments into expectation errors and term premia. Excess returns are primarily driven by expectation errors, whereas term premia are negligible. Investors face challenges when learning about the Federal Reserve’s response to large, but infrequent, negative shocks in real-time
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Liquidity in the global currency market J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-09-29 Angelo Ranaldo, Paolo Santucci de Magistris
We study the liquidity of the global currency market by analyzing the price impact of trading volume. We analyze a decade of CLS intraday data representative of global foreign exchange (FX) trading by developing a refinement of the popular Amihud (2002) illiquidity measure that we call realized Amihud, which is the ratio between realized volatility and trading volume. Inversely related to market depth
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Measuring the welfare cost of asymmetric information in consumer credit markets J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-09-17 Anthony A. DeFusco, Huan Tang, Constantine Yannelis
Information asymmetries are known in theory to lead to inefficiently low credit provision, yet empirical estimates of the resulting welfare losses are scarce. This paper leverages a randomized experiment conducted by a large fintech lender to estimate welfare losses arising from asymmetric information in the market for online consumer credit. Building on methods from the insurance literature, we show
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Editor’s note J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-09-11 Toni M. Whited
Abstract not available
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Institutional investors, the dollar, and U.S. credit conditions J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-09-08 Friederike Niepmann, Tim Schmidt-Eisenlohr
A strong dollar has been associated with lower lending to emerging markets and tighter global financial conditions. This paper documents similar patterns for credit in the U.S. economy: when the U.S. broad dollar index appreciates by 1 percent, U.S. banks’ corporate loan originations fall by 4.5 percent, with banks tightening credit standards and lending to safer borrowers. This negative correlation
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Sovereign risk premia and global macroeconomic conditions J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-09-08 Sandro C. Andrade, Adelphe Ekponon, Alexandre Jeanneret
We study how shifting global macroeconomic conditions affect sovereign bond prices. Bondholders earn premia for two sources of systematic risk: exposure to low-frequency changes in the state of the economy, as captured by expected macroeconomic growth and volatility, and exposure to higher-frequency macroeconomic shocks. Our model predicts that the first source, labeled long-run macro risk, is the
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Corporate culture: Evidence from the field J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-09-07 John R. Graham, Jillian Grennan, Campbell R. Harvey, Shivaram Rajgopal
Ninety-two percent of the 1348 North American executives we survey believe that improving corporate culture would increase firm value. A striking 84% believe their company needs to improve its culture. But how can that be achieved? Our paper provides some guidance by documenting the following: executives’ views on what corporate culture is and how it operates, distinguishing between stated values and
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Overallocation and secondary market outcomes in corporate bond offerings J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-09-07 Hendrik Bessembinder, Stacey Jacobsen, William Maxwell, Kumar Venkataraman
Bond underwriters, lacking “Greenshoe options” and formal systems to track “flipping” activity, have fewer tools than equity underwriters to manage secondary market order flow uncertainty. We show that bond underwriters respond by selectively “overallocating” some issues to attain net short positions. Overallocations are economically substantive, facilitate the syndicate's price stabilization efforts
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Count (and count-like) data in finance J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-09-05 Jonathan B. Cohn, Zack Liu, Malcolm I. Wardlaw
This paper assesses different econometric approaches to working with count-based outcome variables and other outcomes with similar distributions, which are increasingly common in corporate finance applications. We demonstrate that the common practice of estimating linear regressions of the log of 1 plus the outcome produces estimates with no natural interpretation that can have the wrong sign in expectation
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Retail trader sophistication and stock market quality: Evidence from brokerage outages J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-08-30 Gregory W. Eaton, T. Clifton Green, Brian S. Roseman, Yanbin Wu
We study brokerage platform outages to examine the impact of retail investors on financial markets. We contrast outages at Robinhood, which caters to inexperienced investors, with outages at traditional retail brokers. For stocks with high retail interest, we find that negative shocks to Robinhood investor participation are associated with reduced market order imbalances, increased market liquidity
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Bank transparency and deposit flows J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-08-24 Qi Chen, Itay Goldstein, Zeqiong Huang, Rahul Vashishtha
One of the most widely discussed issues in banking regulation and research is transparency. Yet, whether depositors – banks’ most important claimholders – are affected by transparency, is an empirical open question. Analyzing US commercial banks from 1994 to 2019, we show that uninsured deposit flows are more sensitive to information about bank performance when banks are more transparent. We also link
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Dissecting green returns J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-08-12 Ľuboš Pástor, Robert F. Stambaugh, Lucian A. Taylor
Green assets delivered high returns in recent years. This performance reflects unexpectedly strong increases in environmental concerns, not high expected returns. German green bonds outperformed their higher-yielding non-green twins as the “greenium” widened, and U.S. green stocks outperformed brown as climate concerns strengthened. Despite that outperformance, we estimate lower expected returns for
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Size-adapted bond liquidity measures and their asset pricing implications J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-08-13 Michael Reichenbacher, Philipp Schuster
We develop new liquidity measures for bond markets. Existing measures suffer from the combination of two effects. First, transaction costs in OTC markets strongly depend on trade size. Second, many bonds trade only scarcely with strongly differing trading volumes. Therefore, changes in average transaction costs often indicate changing trade sizes rather than changing liquidity. We combine full-sample
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Debt dynamics with fixed issuance costs J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-08-08 Luca Benzoni, Lorenzo Garlappi, Robert S. Goldstein, Chao Ying
We investigate equilibrium debt dynamics for a firm that cannot commit to a future debt policy and is subject to a fixed restructuring cost. We formally characterize equilibria when the firm is not required to repurchase outstanding debt prior to issuing additional debt. For realistic values of issuance costs and debt maturity, the no-commitment policy generates tax benefits that are similar to those
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A unified model of distress risk puzzles J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-08-04 Zhiyao Chen, Dirk Hackbarth, Ilya A. Strebulaev
We document that (i) debt-to-equity ratios and levered equity betas negatively covary with the market risk premium in distressed firms; (ii) the negative covariance generates negative alphas among those firms. We build a dynamic credit risk model to understand the negative covariance between equity betas and the market risk premium, via endogenous and dynamic debt financing over the business cycles
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Why does the Fed move markets so much? A model of monetary policy and time-varying risk aversion J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-07-27 Carolin Pflueger, Gianluca Rinaldi
We show that endogenous variation in risk aversion over the business cycle can jointly explain financial market responses to high-frequency monetary policy shocks with standard asset pricing moments. We newly integrate a work-horse New Keynesian model with countercyclical risk aversion via habit formation preferences. In the model, a surprise increase in the policy rate lowers consumption relative
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The secured credit premium and the issuance of secured debt J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-07-29 Efraim Benmelech, Nitish Kumar, Raghuram Rajan
Credit spreads for secured debt are lower than for unsecured debt, especially when a firm's credit quality deteriorates, the economy slows, or average credit spreads widen. Yet investment-grade firms tend to be reluctant to issue secured debt at all times. In contrast, we find that for firms that are rated below investment grade, the likelihood of secured debt issuance increases as firm credit quality
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Can FinTech reduce disparities in access to finance? Evidence from the Paycheck Protection Program J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-07-27 Isil Erel, Jack Liebersohn
New technology promises to expand the supply of financial services to small businesses poorly served by banks. Does it succeed? We study the response of FinTech to financial services demand created by the introduction of the Paycheck Protection Program. FinTech is disproportionately used in ZIP codes with fewer bank branches, lower incomes, and more minority households, and in industries with fewer
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Price-setting in the foreign exchange swap market: Evidence from order flow J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-07-27 Olav Syrstad, Ganesh Viswanath-Natraj
Using transaction level data from the inter-dealer market, we find that the price impact of one standard deviation change in FX swap order flow has increased from less than one basis point prior to 2008 to about five basis points after 2008. However, the increase in price impact is confined to periods of elevated dispersion in funding costs and over quarterends. Central bank swap lines reduce the order
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Growth forecasts and news about monetary policy J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-07-21 Nina Karnaukh, Petra Vokata
We find that 30-minute changes in bond yields around scheduled Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) announcements are predictable with the pre-FOMC Blue Chip professionals’ revisions in GDP growth forecasts. A positive pre-FOMC GDP growth revision predicts a contractionary policy news shock (positive change in bond yields), a negative GDP growth revision predicts an expansionary policy news shock (negative
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Personal finance education mandates and student loan repayment J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-07-20 Daniel Mangrum
This paper estimates the impact of requiring high school students to complete personal finance education on federal student loan repayment behavior after college. I merge student loan borrowing and repayment data from the College Scorecard with data from the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System on counts of high school graduates enrolling in college from different states. I estimate the causal
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Bucking the trend: Why do IPOs choose controversial governance structures and why do investors let them? J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-07-20 Laura Casares Field, Michelle Lowry
While the percentage of mature firms with classified boards or dual class shares has declined by more than 40% since 1990, the percentage of IPO firms with these structures has doubled over this period. We test whether IPO firms implement these structures optimally or whether they are utilized to allow managers to protect their private benefits of control. Both shareholder voting patterns and changes
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Did the paycheck protection program hit the target? J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-07-12 João Granja, Christos Makridis, Constantine Yannelis, Eric Zwick
This paper provides a comprehensive assessment of financial intermediation and the economic effects of the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP), a large and novel small business support program that was part of the initial policy response to the COVID-19 pandemic in the US. We use loan-level microdata for all PPP loans and high-frequency administrative employment data to present three main findings. First
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The cross-section of investment and profitability: Implications for asset pricing J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-07-07 Mete Kilic, Louis Yang, Miao Ben Zhang
Asset pricing predictions from the investment CAPM depend on the cross-sectional relation between investment and profitability. In samples of U.S. stocks featuring high cross-sectional investment-profitability correlation, both investment and profitability premiums are weak. Consistent with the conditional predictions from the investment CAPM, triple sorts on size, investment, and profitability as
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Risk-adjusted capital allocation and misallocation J. Financ. Econ. (IF 8.238) Pub Date : 2022-07-04 Joel M. David, Lukas Schmid, David Zeke
We develop a theory linking “misallocation,” i.e., dispersion in marginal products of capital (MPK), to macroeconomic risk. Dispersion in MPK depends on (i) heterogeneity in firm-level risk and (ii) the magnitude of risk premia. Stock market-based measures imply that risk considerations explain about 25% of MPK dispersion among US firms and rationalize a large persistent component in firm-level MPK