Multiplicative Contractions, Additive Recoveries: Functional-Form Restrictions on Risk Exposure Dynamics
Liang Chen

TL;DR
This paper tests a regime-dependent functional form restriction on risk exposure dynamics using margin debt data, finding evidence consistent with theoretical models of risk contraction and recovery during market stress.
Contribution
It introduces a joint regime-conditional restriction on risk exposure dynamics and empirically tests it on margin debt data, providing new insights into risk behavior during crashes.
Findings
Regime-interacted regression shows different slopes for calm and stress periods.
Crash depth significantly increases recovery duration ratios.
Empirical results are consistent with theoretical risk contraction and recovery models.
Abstract
We test a regime-conditional functional-form restriction on aggregate risk-exposure dynamics implied by VaR-constrained intermediary models: exposures contract multiplicatively when capital constraints bind and grow additively (level-independent) when slack. The contraction half follows from binding VaR constraints (Brunnermeier and Pedersen 2009; Adrian and Shin 2010; He and Krishnamurthy 2013). The additive-rebuild prediction is derived under constant-rate capital replenishment; we test the joint restriction on FINRA monthly margin debt (1997-2026). Two findings. First, regime-interacted regression of detrended margin growth on lagged level (T=350 months) yields calm slope -0.040 (p=0.082, additive) and stress slope -0.205 (p<0.001, multiplicative); Wald test on regime x level interaction rejects equal dependence (p=0.0016). Second, the restriction implies drawdown-recovery duration…
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