1. Systematic risk, debt maturity, and the term structure of credit spreads
- Author
-
Hui Chen, Yu Xu, and Jun Yang
- Subjects
040101 forestry ,Economics and Econometrics ,050208 finance ,Strategy and Management ,Welfare economics ,education ,05 social sciences ,jel:E32 ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,humanities ,jel:G32 ,jel:G33 ,Term (time) ,Market liquidity ,Accounting ,0502 economics and business ,Systematic risk ,Business cycle ,Economics ,0401 agriculture, forestry, and fisheries ,Debt maturity ,Capital asset pricing model ,health care economics and organizations ,Finance ,Credit risk - Abstract
We build a dynamic capital structure model to study the link between firms' systematic risk exposures and their time-varying debt maturity choices, as well as its implications for the term structure of credit spreads. Compared to short-term debt, long-term debt helps reduce rollover risks, but its illiquidity raises the costs of financing. With both default risk and liquidity costs changing over the business cycle, our calibrated model implies that debt maturity is pro-cyclical, firms with high systematic risk favor longer debt maturity, and that these firms will have more stable maturity structures over the cycle. Moreover, pro-cyclical maturity variation can significantly amplify the impact of aggregate shocks on the term structure of credit spreads, especially for firms with high beta, high leverage, or a lumpy maturity structure. We provide empirical evidence for the model predictions on both debt maturity and credit spreads.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF