This Research Paper on Liquidity and Arbitrage in the Market for Credit Risk will help in your Finance Dissertation Topic
The recent
credit crisis has highlighted the importance of market liquidity and its
interaction with the price of credit risk. We investigate this interaction by
relating the liquidity of corporate bonds to the basis between the credit
default swap (CDS) spread of the issuer and the par-equivalent bond yield
spread. The liquidity of a bond is measured using a recently developed measure
called latent liquidity, which is defined as the weighted average turnover
of funds holding the bond, where the weights are their fractional holdings of
the bond. We find that bonds with higher latent liquidity are more expensive
relative to their CDS contracts after controlling for other realized measures of
liquidity. Analysis of interaction effects shows that highly illiquid bonds of
firms with a greater degree of uncertainty are also expensive, consistent with
limits to arbitrage between CDS and bond markets, due to the higher costs of “shorting”
illiquid bonds. Additionally, we document the positive effects of liquidity in
the CDS market on the CDS-bond basis. We also find that several firm- and
bond-level variables related to credit risk affect the basis, indicating that
the CDS spread does not fully capture the credit risk of the bond.
Introduction
Corporate bonds
are among the least understood instruments in the U.S. financial markets. This
is surprising given the sheer size of the U.S. corporate bond market, about $6.8 trillion outstanding
as of June 2009, which makes such
bonds an
important source of capital for U.S. firms.1 These bonds carry a risk of
default, and hence command a yield premium or spread relative to their risk free
counterparts. However, the academic literature in finance has been unable to explain
a significant component of corporate bond yields/prices in relation to their Treasury
counterparts, despite using a range of structural and reduced-form credit risk
models.
Prior studies
have noted that although default risk is an important determinant of the yield
spread, other factors such as liquidity, taxes, and aggregate market risk
variables (other than credit risk) may also play a significant role in
determining the
spread. Of these other factors, it has been conjectured that liquidity effects
play an important role in the pricing of corporate bonds, and are reflected in
the non default component of their yields (i.e., the portion of the corporate bond
yield that cannot be explained by factors related to default risk). Since
illiquid instruments are difficult to trade, investors holding them demand a risk
premium that is related to the level of liquidity in the instrument. In the
context of corporate bonds, this premium increases the expected return of the
bond in a way that is not directly related to the credit risk embedded in the
instrument. In other words, a premium for liquidity can be thought of as a non default-related
component of the yield spread.
Unfortunately,
the non default component of corporate bond yields has been inadequately
studied, largely due to the paucity of data. In particular, the absence of
frequent trades in corporate bonds makes it difficult to compute trade-based measures
of liquidity relying on quoted/traded prices or yields to measure liquidity, as
has been done in the equity markets. It is difficult, therefore, to measure the
liquidity of corporate bonds directly. Consequently, it is a challenge to directly
study the impact of liquidity on corporate bond yields and prices, thus
leaving the
discussion of
corporate bond spreads somewhat incomplete. An important development during
this decade has been the credit default swap (CDS) market, which has emerged as
the barometer of the market’s collective judgment of the credit risk of the
bonds issued by an obligor. The CDS contract is a derivative in which the
underlying instruments are corporate bonds.
Financial theory
tells us that a strong economic relationship should exist between the CDS and
its underlying instruments. The CDS spread is thus a proxy for the premium
attached to credit risk, which, in a world without frictions, would be exactly equivalent
to the credit risk in the underlying corporate bonds. In practice,
however, it may
itself be affected by market frictions, as discussed later on in the paper. In this
paper, we study the CDS-bond basis, the difference between the CDS spread of the issuer and the
par-equivalent CDS spread of the bond, as a (somewhat imperfect) measure of the
non default component of the bond yield.
We relate the
CDS-bond basis to bond liquidity and other variables such as the bond
characteristics, firm-level credit risk effects, and liquidity in the CDS
market itself. We make several significant contributions in this study.
First, we use
and further validate a new measure of bond liquidity, called latent liquidity,
proposed by Mahanti, Nashikkar, Subrahmanyam, Chacko, and Mallik (2008), which
is based on the holdings of bonds by investors, and thus does not require a
large number of observed trades for its computation. This measure weights the
turnover of the funds that own the bond by their fractional holdings; thus, it
is a measure of the accessibility of a bond to market participants. The attractive
feature of this measure is that it circumvents the problem of non availability
of transaction
data for corporate bonds and yet provides a reasonable proxy for liquidity. We
show that our measure has explanatory power for the liquidity component of the
CDS-bond basis, even after controlling for trading volume and other bond
characteristics such as age, coupon, and issue size, which have been associated
with bond liquidity.
Second, we show
that even after controlling for credit risk using the price of the CDS
contract, corporate bond prices are still affected by factors related to the default
risk in the firm. We also find that the effect is one-sided: When firms are riskier,
their corporate bonds tend to be relatively expensive. Furthermore, it is the illiquid
bonds of firms with more uncertainty that are more expensive relative to their
CDS contracts. Our interpretation is that this conclusion is due to the effects
of frictions in the arbitrage mechanism. Agents participating in the CDS market
and the corporate bond market may have different valuations for the credit risk
of the obligor. However, arbitrageurs who try to profit from this difference
may find it difficult to sell corporate bonds short because of limited supply
in the borrowing and lending markets for corporate bonds. Thus, illiquid
corporate bonds of firms with greater uncertainty are more likely to be
expensive relative to their CDS contracts.
Third, we show
that the liquidity of the CDS contract itself influences both the liquidity of
the bond and the bond price itself. Bonds of issuers whose CDS contracts enjoy
greater liquidity tend to be more expensive (have lower yields) in the cross
section compared with their less liquid counterparts after adjusting for various
bond characteristics. This is evidence of liquidity spillover effects from the
CDS market to the corporate bond market.
Fourth, we
demonstrate the effect of individual bond characteristics, such as the presence
or absence of covenants and differences in tax status, on bond prices.
To our
knowledge, this is the first paper that studies the effect of bond covenants on
bond valuation, using the CDS spread as a control for credit risk. The novel
bond-liquidity measure that we use in this paper is related to the theory
proposed by Amihud and Mendelson (1986) according to which, in equilibrium,
assets with the lowest transaction costs are held by investors with the
shortest trading horizon, and have higher prices. Our metric, proposed by Mahanti et al. (2008), can thus be thought of
as a direct measure of the activity of funds holding a particular bond. It is
also related to the literature on liquidity and asset prices, most notably
Vayanos andWang (2007), who use a search-based model to provide for an
endogenous concentration of liquidity in particular assets.
This
concentration leads to active investors participating in these assets, thus lowering
transaction costs and leading to higher prices at the same time. In this sense,
our measure can be thought of as directly measuring the extent of search
frictions when the marginal holders of a particular bond wish to trade.
Disclaimer- This research paper "Liquidity and Arbitrage in the Market for Credit Risk" is written by Amrut Nashikkar, Marti G. Subrahmanyam, and Sriketan Mahanti and taken from JOURNAL OF FINANCIAL AND QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS Vol. 46, No. 3, June 2011, pp. 627–656- COPYRIGHT 2011, MICHAEL G. FOSTER SCHOOL OF BUSINESS, UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON, SEATTLE, WA 98195 doi:10.1017/S002210901100007X.
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