TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the role of borrower accounting quality in debt contracting and found that poorer borrowers preferred bank loans over private debt. But they did not consider the impact of accounting quality on the choice of the market, with poorer borrowers preferring bank loans.
Abstract: We study the role of borrower accounting quality in debt contracting. Specifically, we examine how accounting quality affects the borrower's choice of private versus public debt market and how the design of debt contracts vary with accounting quality in the two markets. We find that accounting quality affects the choice of the market, with poorer accounting quality borrowers preferring private debt, i.e., bank loans. This is consistent with banks possessing superior information access and processing abilities that reduce adverse selection costs for borrowers. We also find that accounting quality has an economically significant but differential impact on contract design in the two markets consistent with differences in recontracting flexibility across the two markets. In the case of private debt, since there is greater recontracting flexibility, both the price (i.e., interest) and non‐price (i.e., maturity and collateral) terms are significantly more stringent for poorer accounting quality borrowers, unlik...
TL;DR: This paper constructed a panel of zero-coupon nominal government bond yields spanning ten industrialized countries and nearly two decades and computed forward rates and then used two different methods to decompose these forward rates into expected future short-term interest rates and term premiums.
Abstract: This paper provides cross-country empirical evidence on bond risk premia. I construct a panel of zero-coupon nominal government bond yields spanning ten industrialized countries and nearly two decades. I hence compute forward rates and then use two different methods to decompose these forward rates into expected future short-term interest rates and term premiums. The first method uses an affine term structure model with macroeconomic variables as unspanned risk factors; the second method uses surveys. I find that term premium estimates declined across countries over the sample period, especially in countries that appear to have reduced inflation uncertainty by making substantial changes in the monetary policy frameworks of their central banks. During the recent financial crisis, term premiums have remained flat and even declined further in some countries, perhaps reflecting the effects of quantitative easing actions by many central banks.
TL;DR: In this article, the maturity composition and the term structure of interest rate spreads of government debt in emerging markets were studied and the trade-off between these hedging and incentive benefits was quantitatively important for understanding the maturity structure of emerging markets.
Abstract: This paper studies the maturity composition and the term structure of interest rate spreads of government debt in emerging markets. In the data, when interest rate spreads rise, debt maturity shortens and the spread on short-term bonds rises more than the spread on long-term bonds. We build a dynamic model of international borrowing with endogenous default and multiple debt maturities. Long-term debt provides a hedge against future fluctuations in spreads, whereas short-term debt is more effective at providing incentives to repay. The trade-off between these hedging and incentive benefits is quantitatively important for understanding the maturity structure in emerging markets.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed a scale to measure consumer-product attachment, and they identified and measured seven possible determinants of attachment: enjoyment, memories to persons, places, and events, support of self-identity, life vision, utility, reliability, and market value.
Abstract: Due to differences in the attachment consumers experience towards the durable products they own, they hang on to certain products whereas they easily dispose of others. From the viewpoint of sustainability, it may be worthwhile to lengthen the life span of many durable consumer products. Hence, there is a challenge for designers to strengthen the bond between consumers and their products through the product design process. In the present study, we develop a scale to measure consumer-product attachment, and we identify and measure seven possible determinants of attachment: enjoyment, memories to persons, places, and events, support of self-identity, life vision, utility, reliability, and market value. Only memories and enjoyment contribute positively to the degree of attachment. The highest levels of attachment are registered for recently acquired products (<1 year) and for products owned for more than 20 years. For new products, enjoyment may be the main driver of attachment, whereas for old products memories may be more important.
TL;DR: In this paper, the structural and energy properties of normal hydrogen bonds X−H···Y as well as some exceptions to the normal, including proton-shared and ion-pair bonds are discussed.
TL;DR: This article showed that long-run stockholder consumption risk better captures cross-sectional variation in average asset returns than aggregate or non-stockholder consumption risks, and provides more plausible economic magnitudes.
Abstract: We provide new evidence on the success of long-run risks in asset pricing by focusing on the risks borne by stockholders. Exploiting micro-level household consumption data, we show that long-run stockholder consumption risk better captures cross-sectional variation in average asset returns than aggregate or non-stockholder consumption risk, and provides more plausible economic magnitudes. We find that risk aversion estimates around 10 can match observed risk premia for the wealthiest stockholders across sets of test assets that include the 25 Fama and French size and value portfolios, the market portfolio, bond portfolios, and the entire cross-section of stocks.
TL;DR: This paper showed that a large fraction of the variability of emerging market bond spreads is explained by the evolution of global factors such as risk appetite (as reflected in the spread of high yield corporate bonds in developed markets), global liquidity (measured by the international interest rates) and contagion (from systemic events like the Russian default).
Abstract: This paper shows that a large fraction of the variability of emerging market bond spreads is explained by the evolution of global factors such as risk appetite (as reflected in the spread of high yield corporate bonds in developed markets), global liquidity (measured by the international interest rates) and contagion (from systemic events like the Russian default). This link has remained relatively stable over the history of the emerging market class, is robust to the inclusion of country-specific factors, and helps provide accurate long-run predictions. Overall, the results highlight the critical role played by exogenous factors in the evolution of the borrowing cost faced by emerging economies.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the welfare costs of constraining portfolio allocations over the life cycle to mimic default investment choices in defined-contribution pension plans, such as stable value funds, balanced funds, and life cycle (or target date) funds.
Abstract: We investigate optimal consumption, asset accumulation and portfolio decisions in a realistically calibrated life-cycle model with flexible labor supply. Our framework allows for wage rate uncertainly, variable labor supply, social security benefits and portfolio choice over safe bonds and risky equities. Our analysis reinforces prior findings that equities are the preferred asset for young households, with the optimal share of equities generally declining prior to retirement. However, variable labor materially alters pre-retirement portfolio choice by significantly raising optimal equity holdings. Using this model, we also investigate the welfare costs of constraining portfolio allocations over the life cycle to mimic popular default investment choices in defined-contribution pension plans, such as stable value funds, balanced funds, and life-cycle (or target date) funds. We find that life-cycle funds designed to match the risk tolerance and investment horizon of investors have small welfare costs. All other choices, including life-cycle funds which do not match investors' risk tolerance, can have substantial welfare costs.
TL;DR: This article showed that the Merton model does not capture the interest rate sensitivity of corporate debt, which is substantially lower than would be expected from conventional duration measures, and that corporate bond prices are related to a number of marketwide factors such as the Fama-French SMB (small minus big) factor in a way that is not predicted by structural models.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors exploit unique features of the U.S. municipal bond underwriting market to assess how political integrity affects primary financial market outcomes and show that state corruption and political connections have strong effects on several aspects of municipal bond sales and underwriting.
Abstract: We exploit unique features of the U.S. municipal bond underwriting market to assess how political integrity affects primary financial market outcomes. We show that state corruption and political connections have strong effects on several aspects of municipal bond sales and underwriting. Specifically, we find that higher state corruption is associated with greater credit risk, higher bond yields, greater use of external credit enhancement, and use of lower quality underwriters. States that are more corrupt can eliminate the corruption yield penalty by purchasing credit enhancements, effectively selling integrity-related default risk to an independent financial intermediary. Underwriting fees do not vary with cross-state corruption, but were significantly higher during an era when under writers routinely made political campaign contributions to win underwriting business. Furthermore, this pay-to-play underwriting fee premium exists only for negotiated bid bonds where underwriting business can be allocated on the basis of political favoritism. Overall, our results show a strong impact of state corruption and political connections on economic and financial outcomes.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore the intertemporal covariance structure of assets and liabilities and find that the benefits of long-term investing are larger when there are liabilities than when there is no liabilities.
TL;DR: This paper found that local investment banks have substantial comparative and absolute advantages over non-local counterparts when underwriting bonds with higher credit risk and bonds not rated by rating agencies, suggesting that high-risk bonds and non-rated bonds are more difficult to evaluate and market, and that investment banks with a local presence are better able to assess soft information and place difficult bond issues.
Abstract: Using a sample of municipal bond offerings, I find that “local” investment banks have substantial comparative and absolute advantages over nonlocal counterparts--locals charge lower fees and sell bonds at lower yields. Local investment banks’ strongest comparative advantage is at underwriting bonds with higher credit risk and bonds not rated by rating agencies. These findings suggest that high-risk bonds and nonrated bonds are more difficult to evaluate and market, and that investment banks with a local presence are better able to assess “soft” information and place difficult bond issues.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the effects of official fiscal data and creative accounting signals on interest rate spreads between bond yields in the European Union and find that two different measures of creative accounting indeed both increase the spread.
Abstract: We investigate the effects of official fiscal data and creative accounting signals on interest rate spreads between bond yields in the European Union. We find that two different measures of creative accounting indeed both increase the spread. The increase of the risk premium is stronger, if financial markets are unsure about the true extent of creative accounting. Moreover, fiscal transparency reduces risk premia. Instrumental variable regressions confirm these results by addressing potential reverse causality problems and measurement bias.
TL;DR: The authors decompose swap spreads into three components: a convenience yield from holding Treasuries, a credit risk element from the underlying LIBOR rate, and a factor specific to the swap market.
TL;DR: This paper examined the impact of inflation and economic growth expectations and perceived stock market uncertainty on the time-varying correlation between stock and bond returns and found that the stock-bond return correlation is virtually unaffected by economic growth expectation.
Abstract: This article examines the impact of inflation and economic growth expectations and perceived stock market uncertainty on the time-varying correlation between stock and bond returns. The results indicate that stock and bond prices move in the same direction during periods of high inflation expectations, while epochs of negative stock–bond return correlation seem to coincide with subdued inflation expectations. Furthermore, consistent with the ‘flight-to-quality’ phenomenon, the results suggest that periods of elevated stock market uncertainty lead to a decoupling between stock and bond prices. Finally, it is found that the stock–bond return correlation is virtually unaffected by economic growth expectations.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compare the pricing of loans for bank-dependent borrowers and those of borrowers with access to public debt markets, controlling for risk factors, and find that banks with exploitable information should be able to raise their rates in recessions by more than is justified by borrower risk alone.
Abstract: Theory suggests that banks' private information about borrowers lets them hold up borrowers for higher interest rates. Since hold-up power increases with borrower risk, banks with exploitable information should be able to raise their rates in recessions by more than is justified by borrower risk alone. We test this hypothesis by comparing the pricing of loans for bank-dependent borrowers with the pricing of loans for borrowers with access to public debt markets, controlling for risk factors. Loan spreads rise in recessions, but firms with public debt market access pay lower spreads and their spreads rise significantly less in recessions. Copyright (c) 2008 by The American Finance Association.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a new measure of liquidity known as "latent liquidity", which is defined as the weighted average turnover of investors who hold a bond, in which the weights are the fractional investor holdings.
TL;DR: This article found that firms that get their first credit rating at the time of their bond IPO benefit from larger interest rate savings than those that already had a credit rating. And they also found that it is costly for firms to enter the public bond market.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore the determinants of yield differentials between sovereign bonds, using Euro area data, and find that there is a common trend in yield differential, which is correlated with a measure of aggregate risk.
Abstract: The paper explores the determinants of yield differentials between sovereign bonds, using Euro area data. There is a common trend in yield differentials, which is correlated with a measure of aggregate risk. In contrast, liquidity differentials display sizeable heterogeneity and no common factor. We propose a simple model with endogenous liquidity demand, where a bond's liquidity premium depends both on its transaction cost and on investment opportunities. The model predicts that yield differentials should increase in both liquidity and risk, with an interaction term of the opposite sign. Testing these predictions on daily data, we find that the aggregate risk factor is consistently priced, liquidity differentials are priced for a subset of countries, and their interaction with the risk factor is in line with the model's prediction and crucial to detect their effect.
TL;DR: A review of the current status of the market for catastrophic risk (CAT) bonds and other risk-linked securities can be found in this article, where the authors show that the CAT bond market has been growing steadily, with record amounts of risk capital raised in 2005, 2006, and 2007.
Abstract: This article reviews the current status of the market for catastrophic risk (CAT) bonds and other risk-linked securities. CAT bonds and other risk-linked securities are innovative financial vehicles that have an important role to play in financing mega-catastrophes and other types of losses. The vehicles are especially important because they access capital markets directly, exponentially expanding risk-bearing capacity beyond the limited capital held by insurers and reinsurers. The CAT bond market has been growing steadily, with record amounts of risk capital raised in 2005, 2006, and 2007. CAT bond premia relative to expected losses covered by the bonds have declined by more than one-third since 2001. CAT bonds now appear to be priced competitively with conventional catastrophe reinsurance and comparably rated corporate bonds. CAT bonds have grown to the extent that they now play a major role in completing the market for catastrophic-risk finance and are spreading to other lines such as automobile insurance, life insurance, and annuities. CAT bonds are not expected to replace reinsurance but to complement the reinsurance market by providing additional risk-bearing capacity. Other innovative financing mechanisms such as risk swaps, industry loss warranties, and sidecars also are expected to continue to play an important role in financing catastrophic risk.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors find that the U.S. can count on earning more on its claims than it pays on its liabilities, but the returns differential of claims over liabilities is far smaller than previously reported and, importantly, is near zero for portfolio equity and debt securities.
Abstract: Were the U.S. to persistently earn substantially more on its foreign investments (“U.S. claims”) than foreigners earn on their U.S. investments (“U.S. liabilities”), the likelihood that the current environment of sizeable global imbalances will evolve in a benign manner increases. However, we find that the returns differential of U.S. claims over U.S. liabilities is far smaller than previously reported and, importantly, is near zero for portfolio equity and debt securities. For portfolio securities, we confirm our finding using a separate dataset on the actual foreign equity and bond portfolios of U.S. investors and the U.S. equity and bond portfolios of foreign investors; in the context of equity and bond portfolios we find no evidence that the U.S. can count on earning more on its claims than it pays on its liabilities. Finally, we reconcile our finding of a near zero returns differential with observed patterns of cumulated current account deficits, the net international investment position, and the net income balance. JEL codes: F3
TL;DR: The authors examined empirically how the maturity structure of government debt affects bond yields and excess returns, based on a theoretical model of preferred habitat in which clienteles with strong preferences for specific maturities trade with arbitrageurs.
Abstract: We examine empirically how the maturity structure of government debt affects bond yields and excess returns. Our analysis is based on a theoretical model of preferred habitat in which clienteles with strong preferences for specific maturities trade with arbitrageurs. Consistent with the model, we find that (i) the supply of long- relative to short-term bonds is positively related to the term spread, (ii) supply predicts positively long-term bonds' excess returns even after controlling for the term spread and the Cochrane-Piazzesi factor, (iii) the effects of supply are stronger for longer maturities, and (iv) following periods when arbitrageurs have lost money, both supply and the term spread are stronger predictors of excess returns.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used monthly stock and bond return data in the past 150 years (1855-2001) for both the U.S. and U.K. and found that higher stock-bond correlations tend to follow higher short rates and (to a lesser extent) higher inflation rates.
Abstract: Using monthly stock and bond return data in the past 150 years (1855-2001) for both the U.S. and the U.K., this study documents time-varying stock-bond correlation over macroeconomic conditions (the business cycle, the inflation environment and monetary policy stance). There are different patterns of time variation in stock-bond correlations over the business cycle between U.S. and U.K., which implies that bonds may be a better hedge against stock market risk and offer more diversification benefits to stock investors in the US than in the UK. Further, there is a general pattern across both the U.S. and the U.K. during the post-1923 subperiod and during the whole sample period: higher stock-bond correlations tend to follow higher short rates and (to a lesser extent) higher inflation rates.
TL;DR: In this paper, the determinants of country risk premiums as measured by sovereign bond spreads are investigated using a panel of 30 emerging market economies from 1997 to 2007, and the results indicate that both fiscal and political factors matter for credit risk in emerging markets.
Abstract: Using a panel of 30 emerging market economies from 1997 to 2007, this paper investigates the determinants of country risk premiums as measured by sovereign bond spreads. Unlike previous studies, the results indicate that both fiscal and political factors matter for credit risk in emerging markets. Lower levels of political risk are associated with tighter spreads, while efforts at fiscal consolidation narrow credit spreads, especially in countries that experienced prior defaults. The composition of fiscal policy matters: spending on public investment contributes to lower spreads as long as the fiscal position remains sustainable and the fiscal deficit does not worsen.
TL;DR: The authors compare the performance of the banks and bonds model and the traditional neo-Wicksellian model in terms of second moments, variance decompositions and impulse response functions, and study the role of monetary aggregates and velocity in predicting inflation in the two models.
Abstract: Woodford (2003) describes a popular class of neo-Wicksellian models in which monetary policy is characterized by an interest-rate rule, and the money market and financial institutions are typically not even modelled. Critics contend that these models are incomplete and unsuitable for monetary-policy evaluation. Our Banks and Bonds model starts with a standard neo-Wicksellian model and then adds banks and a role for bonds in the liquidity management of households and banks. The Banks and Bonds model gives a more complete description of the economy, but the neo-Wicksellian model has the virtue of simplicity. Our purpose here is to see if the neo-Wicksellian model gives a reasonably accurate account of macroeconomic behaviour in the more complete Banks and Bonds model. We do this by comparing the models' second moments, variance decompositions and impulse response functions. We also study the role of monetary aggregates and velocity in predicting inflation in the two models.
TL;DR: The authors showed that the term premium on long-term bonds in the canonical dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) model used in macroeconomics is far too small and stable relative to the data.
Abstract: The basic inability of standard theoretical models to generate a sufficiently large and variable nominal bond risk premium has been termed the "bond premium puzzle." We show that the term premium on long-term bonds in the canonical dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) model used in macroeconomics is far too small and stable relative to the data. We find that introducing long-memory habits in consumption as well as labor market frictions can help fit the term premium, but only by seriously distorting the DSGE model's ability to fit other macroeconomic variables, such as the real wage; therefore, the bond premium puzzle remains.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyzed the impact of sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) on global financial markets and found that SWFs behave as CAPM-type investors and allocate foreign assets according to market capitalisation rather than liquidity considerations, leading to more capital flows "downhill" from rich to less wealthy economies.
Abstract: This paper analyses the impact of sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) on global financial markets. It presents back-of-the-envelope calculations which simulate the potential impact of a transfer of traditional foreign exchange reserves to SWFs on global capital flows. If SWFs behave as CAPM-type investors and thus allocate foreign assets according to market capitalisation rather than liquidity considerations, official portfolios reduce their “bias” towards the major reserve currencies. As a result, more capital flows “downhill” from rich to less wealthy economies, in line with standard neoclassical predictions. More specifically, it is found that under the assumption of SWFs investing according to market capitalisation weights, the euro area and the United States could be subject to net capital outflows while Japan and the emerging markets would attract net capital inflows. It is also shown that these findings are sensitive to alternative assumptions for the portfolio objectives of SWFs. Finally, the paper discusses whether a change in net capital flows triggered by SWFs could have an impact on stock prices and bond yields. Based on an event study approach, no evidence can be found for a stock price impact of non-commercially motivated stock sales by Norway’s Government Pension Fund. JEL Classification: F30, F40, G15.
TL;DR: In this paper, the determinants of country risk premiums as measured by sovereign bond spreads are investigated using a panel of 30 emerging market economies from 1997 to 2007, and the results indicate that both fiscal and political factors matter for credit risk in emerging markets.
Abstract: Using a panel of 30 emerging market economies from 1997 to 2007, this paper investigates the determinants of country risk premiums as measured by sovereign bond spreads. Unlike previous studies, the results indicate that both fiscal and political factors matter for credit risk in emerging markets. Lower levels of political risk are associated with tighter spreads, while efforts at fiscal consolidation narrow credit spreads, especially in countries that experienced prior defaults. The composition of fiscal policy matters: spending on public investment contributes to lower spreads as long as the fiscal position remains sustainable and the fiscal deficit does not worsen.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors reviewed the key developments in the sukuk market and informed the debate about challenges and opportunities going forward, and highlighted the challenges and challenges for sovereign debt managers and capital market development.
Abstract: Recent years have witnessed a surge in the issuance of Islamic capital market securities (sukuk) by corporates and public sector entities amid growing demand for alternative investments. As the sukuk market continues to develop, new challenges and opportunities for sovereign debt managers and capital market development arise. This paper reviews the key developments in the sukuk market and informs the debate about challenges and opportunities going forward.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a model of international portfolios with real exchange rate and non-financial risks that account for observed levels of equity home bias, and derive equilibrium bond and equity portfolios in terms of directly measurable hedge ratios.