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You are watching: The Stock Market Faces A Massive Deleveraging Risk In 2025
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What are the historical examples of deleveraging?
The Great Depression in the United States: 1929–1943.
United Kingdom: 1947–1980.
1997 Asian financial crisis: Malaysia 1998–2008.
Latin American debt crisis: Mexico 1982–1992.
Argentina: 2002–2008.
How does deleveraging impact stock prices?
If many banks deleverage at the same time, stock prices fall as companies that can no longer borrow from the banks are revalued based on the price of assets they are trying to sell at a discount.
What is deleveraging in the stock market?
Deleveraging is when a company or individual attempts to decrease its total financial leverage. In other words, deleveraging is the reduction of debt and the opposite of leveraging. The most direct way for an entity to deleverage is to immediately pay off any existing debts and obligations on its balance sheet.