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18
Oct
Although the close relationship between credit spreads and economic activity has held most of the time since 1950, the late 1990s witnessed a significant decoupling. Companies expected long-term stable and high growth rates, driven by new technologies like internet and mobile communication.
Coupled with a sustained rise in profitability, an idea strongly promoted by the Fed, this expectation caused companies to invest heavily and to leverage their balance sheets. In this period maximization of shareholder value was the credo of many managers. Despite strong economic growth credit markets punished the rise of financial and operating leverage that was observable across most industries and companies with widening credit spreads. Excessively high default rates in 2001 and 2002 showed that market participants anticipated the rise in systematic risk quite early. The sustained equity downturn and cases of fraud added to the woes of the credit markets.
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