comment on “financial cycles: what? how? when?” by stijn claessens, m.ayhan kose and marco...

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Comment on “Financial Cycles: What? How? When?” by Stijn Claessens, M.Ayhan Kose and Marco Terrones Jeff Frankel Harvard University and NBER International Seminar on Macroeconomics, De Nederlandsche Bank Amsterdam, 19 June, 2010

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Page 1: Comment on “Financial Cycles: What? How? When?” by Stijn Claessens, M.Ayhan Kose and Marco Terrones Jeff Frankel Harvard University and NBER International

Comment on “Financial Cycles: What? How? When?”

by Stijn Claessens, M.Ayhan Koseand Marco Terrones

Jeff FrankelHarvard University and NBER

International Seminar on Macroeconomics,De Nederlandsche Bank

Amsterdam, 19 June, 2010

Page 2: Comment on “Financial Cycles: What? How? When?” by Stijn Claessens, M.Ayhan Kose and Marco Terrones Jeff Frankel Harvard University and NBER International

Statistical analysis of financial cycles

Four types of financial events:

Credit volume

House prices

Equity prices

Exchange rates

Page 3: Comment on “Financial Cycles: What? How? When?” by Stijn Claessens, M.Ayhan Kose and Marco Terrones Jeff Frankel Harvard University and NBER International

Impressively comprehensive body of work:

Data base: > 750 financial cycles

in 21 advanced countries,

1960:1-2009:4. That implies almost one cycle per year --

our first indication that the frequency used to define cycles is too high.

Page 4: Comment on “Financial Cycles: What? How? When?” by Stijn Claessens, M.Ayhan Kose and Marco Terrones Jeff Frankel Harvard University and NBER International

Important that the net is cast wide

Similar advantages to work by Reinhart & Rogoff (2009), This Time is Different, and various economic historians.

True meaning of the “Black Swan.”

Page 5: Comment on “Financial Cycles: What? How? When?” by Stijn Claessens, M.Ayhan Kose and Marco Terrones Jeff Frankel Harvard University and NBER International

True meaning of the “Black Swan” Black Swan has come to be used

as if to mean a very unlikely event, “a 7-standard-deviation realization.” Or else Knightian uncertainty: an “unknown unknown.” The “fat tails” interpretation is marginally better.

In my view, it should mean an event: that is considered impossible by those whose frame of reference

is limited in time span and geographical area, but that is well within the probability distribution

for those whose data set includes other countries and other decades or centuries.

Page 6: Comment on “Financial Cycles: What? How? When?” by Stijn Claessens, M.Ayhan Kose and Marco Terrones Jeff Frankel Harvard University and NBER International

Black Swan examples

1. All swans are white (in England).2. Terrorists don’t blow up big office buildings.3. Housing prices don’t fall (in post-war US).4. Volatilities, e.g., VIX-implicit (2004-06), are low.5. Big banks don’t go bankrupt.6. European governments don’t default (1999-2010)

nor go to the IMF.

Page 7: Comment on “Financial Cycles: What? How? When?” by Stijn Claessens, M.Ayhan Kose and Marco Terrones Jeff Frankel Harvard University and NBER International

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Black swan: “House prices don’t go down”Black swan: “House prices don’t go down”

Page 8: Comment on “Financial Cycles: What? How? When?” by Stijn Claessens, M.Ayhan Kose and Marco Terrones Jeff Frankel Harvard University and NBER International

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In 2003-07, market-perceived volatility, as measured by options (VIX), plummeted.So did spreads on US junk & emerging market bonds.In 2008, it all reversed.

Source: “The EMBI in the Global Village,” Javier Gomez, May 18, 2008

juanpablofernandez.wordpress.com/2008/05/

Black Swan: risk is low (2004-2006)

Page 9: Comment on “Financial Cycles: What? How? When?” by Stijn Claessens, M.Ayhan Kose and Marco Terrones Jeff Frankel Harvard University and NBER International

Black swan: “European countries don’t default”

Page 10: Comment on “Financial Cycles: What? How? When?” by Stijn Claessens, M.Ayhan Kose and Marco Terrones Jeff Frankel Harvard University and NBER International

Relationship of this paper, which dates financial cycles, to business cycle dating

“…in parallel with the business cycle literature, we use a well-established and reproducible methodology for the dating of financial downturns and upturns.”

Since this is an NBER conference, we should clarify that the NBER Business Cycle Dating Committee’s procedures are very far from reproducible: No rules of thumb; no econometric model. “An Art, not a Science,”

for good reasons: the data set is not big enough.

Page 11: Comment on “Financial Cycles: What? How? When?” by Stijn Claessens, M.Ayhan Kose and Marco Terrones Jeff Frankel Harvard University and NBER International

“ ‘Classical’ methodology focuses on changes in levels of variables” “An alternative methodology would be

to consider how a variable fluctuates around its trend, and then to identify a financial cycle as a deviation from this trend” (p.14) or ‘business cycle’ in Stock & Watson (1999).

Burns and Mitchell (1946) Fn. 24: BCDC

Exception: calling end of recession We haven’t called trough of 2007-09 because Y << peak.

Page 12: Comment on “Financial Cycles: What? How? When?” by Stijn Claessens, M.Ayhan Kose and Marco Terrones Jeff Frankel Harvard University and NBER International

The paper is very long > 60 pages, single spaced. Findings are numerous and diffuse. Too many cakes and ingredients. Perhaps the paper could be shortened,

so focus on fewer findings. Consider taking out exchange rate cycles.

Page 13: Comment on “Financial Cycles: What? How? When?” by Stijn Claessens, M.Ayhan Kose and Marco Terrones Jeff Frankel Harvard University and NBER International

Three facts highlighted: Financial declines are more abrupt than upturns.

Fits conventional wisdom (crashes), but not what I had understood from other papers.

Equity & house price cycles are (even) longer and more pronounced than others Housing recoveries take more than 3 years.

Evolution: Shortening of equity price cycles, and housing price upturns.

Page 14: Comment on “Financial Cycles: What? How? When?” by Stijn Claessens, M.Ayhan Kose and Marco Terrones Jeff Frankel Harvard University and NBER International

Among other findings (CW, but…)

“Positive duration dependence” (p.30-31)

≡ the longer a cycle lasts, the more likely a reverse. I had thought not:

“expansions don’t die of old age.”

U.S. asset prices have stronger effects in EU, than vice versa. Yes, but why? EU is as large as US. We knew why before EMU. But why still now?

Page 15: Comment on “Financial Cycles: What? How? When?” by Stijn Claessens, M.Ayhan Kose and Marco Terrones Jeff Frankel Harvard University and NBER International

Another finding more surprising:

“Greater trade and financial openness are significantly associated with shorter financial downturns… (p.32).

Really? I would like to think so.

E.g., Frankel & Cavallo (2008) found trade openness reduces crises.

But I am skeptical with respect to the 2008-09 crisis. E.g., Frankel & Saravelos (2010) on Early Warning Indicators.

Page 16: Comment on “Financial Cycles: What? How? When?” by Stijn Claessens, M.Ayhan Kose and Marco Terrones Jeff Frankel Harvard University and NBER International

In conclusion… an interesting paper, with lots of findings to think about.