scholarly journals Credit Risk in G20 Nations: A Comparative Analysis in International Finance Using Option-Adjusted-Spreads

2022 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 25
Author(s):  
Natalia Boliari ◽  
Kudret Topyan

Corporate bond yields are the manifestation of the cost of financing for private firms, and if properly evaluated, they provide researchers with valuable risk information. Within this context, this work is the first study producing corporate yield spreads for all S&P-rated bonds of G20 nations to explain their comparative riskiness. The option-adjusted spread analysis is an advanced method that enables us to compare the bonds with embedded options and different cash flow characteristics. For securities with embedded options, the volatility in the interest rates plays a role in ascertaining whether the option is going to be invoked or not. Therefore, researchers need a spread that, when added to all the forward rates on the tree, will make the theoretical value equal to the market price. The spread that satisfies this condition is called the option-adjusted spread, since it considers the option embedded into the issue. Ultimately, this work investigates the credit risk differentials of S&P rated outstanding bonds issued by the G20 nations to provide international finance professionals with option-adjusted corporate yield spreads showing the credit risk attributable to debt instruments. Detailed results computed using OAS methodology are presented in tables and used to answer the six vital credit-risk-related questions introduced in the introduction.

2015 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 186-201 ◽  
Author(s):  
DAVID F. BABBEL

AbstractThe Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation's (PBGC) Pension Insurance Modeling System model has taken on the Herculean task of modeling in detail and under many scenarios the cash outflows associated with the pension obligations, they have assumed. This paper's comments are focused almost entirely upon the PBGC's termination liabilities, and address four pressing issues: (1) the need to discount the liability stream by current riskless interest rates instead of using corporate bond rates that reflect credit risk, call risk, and other risks, or using some ad hoc prescribed average of past rates; (2) the need to use a term structure of interest rates; (3) the need to employ more useful investment management benchmarks; and (4) how to implement a relevant and rigorous liability benchmark.


2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Huan Yang ◽  
Jun Cai

PurposeThe question is whether debt market investors see through managers' attempts to hide their pension obligations. The authors establish a robust relation between understated pension liabilities and corporate bond yield spreads after controlling for factors that have been previously identified as having a significant impact on firms' cost of borrowing. The results support the idea that bond market investors are not being misled by the use of high pension liability discount rates by some companies to lower their reported pension obligations. For a small fraction of debt issuers, the reported pension liabilities are larger than the pension liabilities valued at the stipulated interest rate benchmarks. For these issuers with overstated pension liabilities, bond investors adjust their borrowing costs downward.Design/methodology/approachThe authors investigate the relation between corporate bond yield spreads and understated pension liabilities relative to long-term Treasury and high-grade corporate bond yields. They aim to answer two questions. First, what are the sizes of over or understated pension liabilities relative to guideline benchmarks? Second, do debt market investors see through the potential management manipulation of pension discount rates? The authors find that firms with large understated pension liabilities face higher marginal borrowing costs after taking into account issue-specific features, firm characteristics, macroeconomic conditions and other pension information such as funded status and mandatory contributions.FindingsThe average understated projected benefit obligations (PBOs) are understated by $394.3 and $335.6, equivalent to 3.5 and 3.0% of the beginning of the fiscal year market value, respectively. The average understated accumulated benefit obligations (ABOs) are understated by $359.3 and $305.3 million, equivalent to 3.1 and 2.6%, of the beginning of the fiscal year market value, respectively. Relative to AA-grade corporate bond yields, the average difference between firm pension discount rates and benchmark yields becomes much smaller; the percentage of firm pension discount rates higher than benchmark yields is also much smaller. As a result, understated pension liabilities become negligible. The authors establish a robust relation between corporate bond yield spreads and measures of understated pension liabilities after controlling for issue-specific features, firm characteristics, other pension information (funded status and mandatory contributions), macroeconomic conditions, calendar effects and industry effects.Originality/valueS&P Rating Services recognizes the issue that there is considerably more variability in discount rate assumptions among companies than in workforce demographics or the interest rate environment in which firms operate (Standard and Poor's, 2006). S&P also indicates that it would be desirable to normalize different discount rate assumptions but acknowledges that it is difficult to do so. In practice, S&P Rating Services conducts periodic surveys to see whether firms' assumed discount rates conform to the normal standard. The paper makes an initial attempt to quantify the size of understated pension liabilities and their impact on corporate bond yield spreads. This approach can be extended to study firms' costs of equity capital, the pricing of seasoned equity offerings and the pricing of merger and acquisition transaction deals, among other questions.


2009 ◽  
Vol 44 (3) ◽  
pp. 641-656 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gady Jacoby ◽  
Rose C. Liao ◽  
Jonathan A. Batten

AbstractWhat drives the compensation demanded by investors in risky bonds? Longstaff and Schwartz (1995) predict that one key factor is the time-varying negative correlation between interest rates and the yield spreads on corporate bonds. However, the effects of callability and taxes also need to be considered in empirical analyses. Canadian bonds have no tax effects, yet, after controlling for callability, the correlation between riskless interest rates and corporate bond spreads remains negligible. Our results provide support for reduced-form models that explicitly define a default hazard process and untie the relation between the firm’s asset value and default probability.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 117-128
Author(s):  
Maunatun Zulfa ◽  
Aida Nahar

Abstract The aims of this research was to analyze the effect of interest rates, bond ratings, company size, exchange rates, bond coupons, matutity, bond liquidity, solvency, and profitability on corporate bond yields. Yields have been received by investors from the bond investment profits are always fluctuating. The total number of population in this study were all corporate companies that issue bonds listed on the Indonesia Stock Exchange (IDX) for the 2015-2017 period. A total of 90 bonds from 12 corporate companies were sampled in this study. The analytical tool used is multiple linear regression. The results of this study indicate that the dominant factors affecting bond yields are bond coupons and maturity. Bond coupons have a positive and significant effect on bond yields. The result of the research showed that matutity could prove to produce a negative and significant effect on bond yields. Keywords: Bond coupons; bond liquidity; bond ratings; bond yields; company size; exchange rates; interest rates; matutity; profitability; solvency Abstrak Tujuan dari penelitian ini adalah untuk menganalisis pengaruh tingkat bunga, peringkat obligasi, ukuran perusahaan, nilai tukar, kupon obligasi, matutity, likuiditas obligasi, solvabilitas, dan profitabilitas terhadap hasil obligasi perusahaan. Imbal hasil yang diterima investor dari investasi obligasi selalu berfluktuasi. Jumlah total populasi dalam penelitian ini adalah semua perusahaan perusahaan yang menerbitkan obligasi yang terdaftar di Bursa Efek Indonesia (BEI) untuk periode 2015-2017. Sebanyak 90 obligasi dari 12 perusahaan perusahaan dijadikan sampel dalam penelitian ini. Alat analisis yang digunakan adalah regresi linier berganda. Hasil penelitian ini menunjukkan bahwa faktor dominan yang mempengaruhi hasil obligasi adalah kupon obligasi dan jatuh tempo. Kupon obligasi memiliki efek positif dan signifikan terhadap hasil obligasi. Hasil penelitian menunjukkan bahwa matutity dapat membuktikan menghasilkan efek negatif dan signifikan terhadap hasil obligasi. Kata kunci: Kupon obligasi; likuiditas obligasi; peringkat obligasi; hasil obligasi; ukuran perusahaan; nilai tukar; suku bunga; matutity; keuntungan; solvabilitas


2017 ◽  
Vol 22 (Special Edition) ◽  
pp. 25-51
Author(s):  
Jamshed Y. Uppal

Economists typically use multiple indicators to assess the burden of external debt, such as the ratios of the stock of debt to exports and to gross national product, and the ratios of debt service to exports and to government revenue. As opposed to those methodologies, this article examines the Pakistan’s external debt position using a market based approach which analyzes the marginal costs of external debt as indicated by the yields on the country’s Eurobonds and the spreads on the Credit Default Swaps (CDS) traded in the international markets. The results show a sharp decline in the yields on the Pakistani Eurobonds from their peak reached during the global financial crisis (GFC) period and this decline was largely driven by quantitative easing and the resultant low interest rates in the international debt markets. Also, the continued decline in the yields in the more recent period, 2013-2017, was due to strengthening of the county’s borrowing capacity over the period. The analysis also shows that Pakistani yields seem to be converging to yields for other Asian countries, even though that the yield-spreads between Pakistan and others countries are still substantial. In conclusion the decrease in bond yields and CDS spreads may signal that the country’s external debt is currently at sustainable levels.


2011 ◽  
Vol 101 (4) ◽  
pp. 1514-1534 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan H Wright

This paper provides cross-country empirical evidence on term 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 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 premiums declined internationally over the sample period, especially in countries that apparently reduced inflation uncertainty by making substantial changes in their monetary policy frameworks. (JEL E13, E43, E52, G12, H63)


2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 134-162 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haitao Li ◽  
Chunchi Wu ◽  
Jian Shi

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to estimate the effects of liquidity on corporate bond spreads. Design/methodology/approach Using a systematic liquidity factor extracted from the yield spreads between on- and off-the-run Treasury issues as a state variable, the authors jointly estimate the default and liquidity spreads from corporate bond prices. Findings The authors find that the liquidity factor is strongly related to conventional liquidity measures such as bid-ask spread, volume, order imbalance, and depth. Empirical evidence shows that the liquidity component of corporate bond yield spreads is sizable and increases with maturity and credit risk. On average the liquidity spread accounts for about 25 percent of the spread for investment-grade bonds and one-third of the spread for speculative-grade bonds. Research limitations/implications The results show that a significant part of corporate bond spreads are due to liquidity, which implies that it is not necessary for credit risk to explain the entire corporate bond spread. Practical implications The results show that returns from investments in corporate bonds represent compensations for bearing both credit and liquidity risks. Originality/value It is a novel approach to extract a liquidity factor from on- and off-the-run Treasury issues and use it to disentangle liquidity and credit spreads for corporate bonds.


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