Option-Based Credit Spreads / Christopher L. Culp, Yoshio Nozawa, Pietro Veronesi.
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- G0 - General
- G12 - Asset Pricing • Trading Volume • Bond Interest Rates
- G13 - Contingent Pricing • Futures Pricing
- G21 - Banks • Depository Institutions • Micro Finance Institutions • Mortgages
- G24 - Investment Banking • Venture Capital • Brokerage • Ratings and Ratings Agencies
- G3 - Corporate Finance and Governance
- Hardcopy version available to institutional subscribers
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Working Paper | Biblioteca Digital | Colección NBER | nber w20776 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not For Loan |
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December 2014.
We present a novel empirical benchmark for analyzing credit risk using "pseudo firms" that purchase traded assets financed with equity and zero-coupon bonds. By no-arbitrage, pseudo bonds are equivalent to Treasuries minus put options on pseudo-firm assets. Empirically, like corporate spreads, pseudo-bond spreads are large, countercyclical, and predict lower economic growth. Using this framework, we find that bond market illiquidity, investors' over-estimation of default risks, and corporate frictions do not seem to explain excessive observed credit spreads, but, instead, a risk premium for tail and idiosyncratic asset risks is the primary determinant of corporate spreads.
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