Abstract

We analyze miscoordination on runs among debt investors under changing capital structure and market liquidity of firm assets. Investors draw on a finite, common pool of liquidity. In case of a run, repay to debt investors is partial and endogenous. The resulting global game with one-sided strategic complementarity gives rise to non-monotone comparative statics. When liquidity dries up, increasing short-term financing may decrease the probability of runs, more short-term debt can discipline debt investors to better coordinate. As a result, capital and liquidity regulation may harm stability. Results hold under partial asset liquidation or collateralized borrowing.

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