Mete Kilic, University of Southern California - seminar

Friday 26 April 2024, 10:15am to 11:30am

Venue

LT5, LUMS

Open to

Postgraduates, Staff

Registration

Registration not required - just turn up

Event Details

Accounting and Finance, Finance seminar presented by Mete Kilic, University of Southern California. Paper title: Risk and Risk-Free Rates

Mete Kilic - USC Marshall

Abstract

Risk-free interest rates and the VIX index comove negatively on average, as predicted by precautionary savings. But this comovement turns positive on FOMC days. This pattern is consistently observed across a diverse array of risk-free interest rates, including nominal, real, swap, short-term, and long-term rates. Our high-frequency analysis reveals that the impact of monetary policy shocks on conditional risk in financial markets drives this result. We provide an explanation for these findings in a model where levered investors akin to financial intermediaries hold and price a risky asset, such as equity. Upon an unexpected positive monetary policy shock, equilibrium interest rates and levered investors’ borrowing costs increase persistently. This raises investors’ leverage and the volatility of stochastic discount factor, leading to lower risk appetite and amplified financial market risks.

Contact Details

Name Julie Stott
Email

j.stott2@lancaster.ac.uk