
CÍMLAP
Király Júlia - Nagy Márton - Szabó E. Viktor
Contagion and the beginning of the crisis - pre-Lehman period
CONTENTS, ABSTRACT
Contents
Abstract
1 Introduction
2 Prologue - the 2000s
3 The spark - the US sub-prime mortgage market and the originate-and-distribute (OAD) model
4 The spillover. Structured finance markets - collateralised debt obligations (CDO) and their counterparts
4.1 Development of securitisation from pass-through to structured finance
4.2 Major and minor characters of the securitisation process
4.3 Development of structured product markets
5 The sub-prime crisis
5.1 Repricing of risks
5.2 Deterioration of market and funding liquidity
5.3 Confidence crisis in the interbank markets
5.4 Risk of a credit crunch
5.5 Spreading, magnitude and distribution of losses
6 Outside the epicentre
6.1 'Flight to quality' - sharp rise in risk premiums
6.2 Deteriorating financing conditions
6.3 Risk of a credit crunch in Hungary
7. Conclusions
Acronyms used in the text
References
Abstract
This paper provides an overview of the antecedents, main drivers and
spillover mechanisms of the turbulence emanating from the US sub-prime
credit market in the summer of 2007. Its primary goal is to discuss
the facts and interrelationships featured in the various analyses
and statistics in a uniform, non-standard approach, to separate the
'centre' from the 'periphery' in terms of the impact of contagion, and
to understand the causes and consequences in the pre-Lehman period.
The paper concludes that the primary causes of the turmoil were a
persistently low international interest rate environment and financial
imbalances engendered by globalisation. The combination of accelerating
house price inflation and rapid financial asset price rises due to
sub-prime mortgage credit securitisations (the originate-and-distribute
model) as well as the bursting of asset price bubbles collectively were
responsible for the magnitude of the distress. The spillover from the
turmoil, in turn, was the consequence of increased international financial
integration. One innovation of the paper is a detailed analysis of the
channel of contagion within financial integration: a confidence crisis,
coupled with turbulence in the interbank markets, played a major role in
the centre, while on the periphery the triggers were internal vulnerability,
rises in risk premia and reduced access to credit.