Abstract
Financial intermediary balance sheets matter for asset returns even when these intermediaries do not directly participate in the relevant asset markets. During the National Banking Era, liquidity conditions for the New York Clearinghouse (NYCH) banks forecast excess returns for stocks, bonds, and currencies. The NYCH banks had little to no direct participation in these markets; their main link to these markets was through securities financing. Liquidity conditions affect asset prices through the credit growth of the NYCH banks, which shapes marginal investors' discount rates. I use institutional features of this era to provide evidence in favor of this mechanism.
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CITATION STYLE
Weiss, C. R. (2020). Intermediary Asset Pricing during the National Banking Era. International Finance Discussion Papers, 2020.0(1298), 1–59. https://doi.org/10.17016/ifdp.2020.1302
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