International Shock Transmission after the Lehman Brothers Collapse: Evidence from Syndicated Lending
American Economic Review Papers & Proceedings, 102(3): 231–237, May 2012
7 Pages Posted: 18 Jan 2012 Last revised: 5 Jul 2012
Date Written: May 17, 2012
Abstract
After Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy in September 2008, cross-border bank lending contracted sharply. To explain the severity and variation in this contraction, we analyze detailed data on cross-border syndicated lending by 75 banks to 59 countries. We find that banks that had to write down sub-prime assets, refinance large amounts of long-term debt, and experienced sharp declines in their market-to-book ratio, transmitted these shocks across borders by curtailing their lending abroad. While shocked banks differentiated between countries in much the same way as less constrained banks, they restricted their lending more to small borrowers.
Keywords: cross-border lending, bank-funding shocks, crisis transmission
JEL Classification: F36, F42, F52, G15, G21, G28
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
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