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A Large Creditor in Contagious Liquidity Crises

  • Frederick Dongchuhl Oh KAIST College of Business, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
  • Junghum Park KAIST College of Business, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology
This paper presents a contagious liquidity crises model for nonfinancial firms in which a large creditor influences the extent to which the contagion spreads across firms. We consider a sequential framework where two rollover games occur one after another. A liquidity crisis in one firm triggers a liquidity crisis in another firm through changes in the risk attitudes of creditors from the wealth effect. We show that the presence of a large creditor with a sufficient asset size reduces the contagion effect. Moreover, a concentration of a large creditor¡¯s loan portfolio towards the former firm increases the contagion effect. (JEL G01, G33, D82, D83)

  • Frederick Dongchuhl Oh
  • Junghum Park
This paper presents a contagious liquidity crises model for nonfinancial firms in which a large creditor influences the extent to which the contagion spreads across firms. We consider a sequential framework where two rollover games occur one after another. A liquidity crisis in one firm triggers a liquidity crisis in another firm through changes in the risk attitudes of creditors from the wealth effect. We show that the presence of a large creditor with a sufficient asset size reduces the contagion effect. Moreover, a concentration of a large creditor¡¯s loan portfolio towards the former firm increases the contagion effect. (JEL G01, G33, D82, D83)
Contagion,Large Creditor,Liquidity Crisis,Global Game,Wealth Effect,Coordination Failure