|
Economics Papers
Economics Website
Policies
Search Economics
Submit a Paper
Notify me of new papers
|
 |

Maturity Mismatch and Financial Crises: Evidence from Emerging Market Corporations
Hoyt C. Bleakley, University of California, San Diego
Kevin Cowan, Inter-American Development Bank
ABSTRACT: Substantial attention has been paid in recent years to the risk of maturity mismatch in
emerging markets. Although this risk is microeconomic in nature, the evidence advanced thus far
has taken the form of macro correlations. We evaluate this mechanism empirically at the micro
level by using a database of over 3000 publicly traded firms from fifteen emerging markets. We
measure the risk of short-term exposure by estimating, at the firm level, the effect on investment
of the interaction of short-term exposure and aggregate capital flows. This effect is (statistically)
zero, contrary to the prediction of the maturity-mismatch hypothesis. This conclusion is robust
to using a variety of different estimators, alternative measures of capital flows, and controls for
devaluation effects and access to international capital. We do find evidence that short-termexposed
firms pay higher financing costs and liquidate assets at “fire sale” prices, but not that
this reduction in net worth translates into a drop in investment.
SUGGESTED CITATION: Hoyt C. Bleakley and Kevin Cowan,
"Maturity Mismatch and Financial Crises: Evidence from Emerging Market Corporations"
(December 1, 2004).
Department of Economics, UCSD.
Paper 2004-16.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/ucsdecon/2004-16
|