← Search

The Costs of Sovereign Default: Evidence from the Stock Market

Sandro C. Andrade; Vidhi Chhaochharia

University of Miami

Review of Financial Studies 2018

We use stock market data to test cross-sectional implications of theories of sovereign default and provide a market-based estimate of sovereign default costs. We find that the stock prices of firms vulnerable to financial intermediation disruption, or firms more exposed to the government, are particularly sensitive to changes in sovereign credit spreads. This is consistent with theories in which default is costly because it disrupts financial intermediation and damages government reputation. Estimation of a structural valuation model indicates that the market prices stocks as if sovereign default has large effects on vulnerable stocks, translating to a 12% destruction of the value of their productive assets. Received July 9, 2011; editorial decision August 16, 2017 by Editor Geert Bekaert.

DOI
10.1093/rfs/hhx136
Volume
31 (5)
Pages
1707-1751
Language
en
Export
BibTeX
Sources
openalex crossref