Working Paper Revision

News, sovereign debt maturity, and default risk


Abstract: Leading into a debt crisis, interest rate spreads on sovereign debt rise before the economy experiences a decline in productivity, suggesting that news about future economic developments may play an important role in these episodes. In a VAR estimation, a news shock has a larger contemporaneous impact on sovereign credit spreads than a comparable shock to labor productivity. A quantitative model of news and sovereign debt default with endogenous maturity choice generates impulse responses and a variance decomposition similar to the empirical VAR estimates. The dynamics of the economy after a bad news shock share some features of a productivity shock and others of sudden stop events. However, unlike episodes of sudden stops, long-term debt does not shield the country from bad news shocks, and it may even exacerbate default risk. Finally, an increase in the precision of news allows the government to improve its debt maturity management, especially during periods of high stress in credit markets, and thus face lower yield spreads while increasing the amount of debt.

Keywords: Spreads; Sovereign Debt; Maturity; Default; Country Risk; Crises; News;

JEL Classification: F34; F41; G15;

https://doi.org/10.20955/wp.2018.033

Status: Published in Journal of International Economics

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Provider: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Part of Series: Working Papers

Publication Date: 2020-05-18

Number: 2018-033

Note: Title of previous version: News, Country Risk, and Sovereign Default.

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