http://www.usc.edu/schools/business/..._COVAL-cjs.pdf
This was just released - an extensive study of the "liquidity crisis" by some people over at harvard. I must stress how "unbiased", and more specifically, "non-austrian", the study was - because it pretty much verifies what the Austrian position has been all along: that there is no "liquidity crisis", banks were fine, and most importantly: that the bank bailouts have been computely useless at best, and horribly catastrophic at worst. Oh, and what of all the laws passed in the name of the supposed "crisis"? Hmm.
Poor Keynes!
"...the pricing of investment-grade corporate credit has largely been consistent with that of the equity market when viewed through the structural model. In other words, from the context of the structural model, there should be nothing particularly surprising about the severe widening of credit spreads in the investment grade CDX [credit index] and the underlying cash bond credit spreads. Indeed the observed widening of the CDX spread is, if anything, somewhat low relative to what the structural model forecasts conditional on the market declining by 40% and its long-term volatility doubling. The out-of-sample results challenge the commonly advocated view that the pricing of credit securities has become distressed, and instead suggest that spreads on the synthetic securities are unusually low."
Poor Keynes!
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