Conference Agenda

Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 9th May 2025, 09:06:04am CEST

 
 
Session Overview
Session
AP 21: Pricing of credit risk
Time:
Saturday, 24/Aug/2024:
11:00am - 12:30pm

Session Chair: Christian Wagner, WU Vienna University of Economics and Business
Location: Reduta | Large Concert Hall (floor 2)


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Presentations
ID: 1130

Passive Demand and Active Supply: Evidence from Maturity-mandated Corporate Bond Funds

Lorenzo Bretscher1, Lukas Schmid2, Tiange Ye3

1University of Lausanne/Swiss Finance Institute; 2USC, Marshall; 3USC, Marshall

Discussant: Nils Friewald (NHH Norwegian School of Economics)

We identify a novel and common exogenous demand shock caused by passive funds in the corporate bond market. Specifically, passive fund demand for corporate bonds displays discontinuity around the maturity cutoffs separating long-term, intermediate-term, and short-term bonds and increases significantly upon a bond's crossing of 10-, 5-, and 3-year time-to-maturity cutoffs. We develop a novel identification strategy to study the impact of passive fund demand in the corporate bond market. First, we find that these non-fundamental demand shifts lead to a significant and lasting decrease in yield spreads, as well as persistent liquidity improvements. Second, passive fund demand shocks spill over to the primary market, causing lower issuing yield spreads, and firms engaging in debt market timing by substituting expensive bank debt with cheaper bond financing. We provide causal evidence that non-fundamental demand shocks can have real effects in that constrained firms use issuance proceeds to fund investment. Our findings inform the ongoing debate about the regulatory treatment of cross-trades between funds by the SEC.

EFA2024_1130_AP 21_Passive Demand and Active Supply.pdf


ID: 761

The Corporate Bond Factor Zoo

Phlippe Mueller2, Christian Julliard1, Alexander Dickerson3

1LSE, United Kingdom; 2University of Warwick, United Kingdom; 3University of New South Wales, Australia

Discussant: Paolo Zaffaroni (imperial college london)

Analyzing 563 trillion possible models, we find that the majority of tradable factors designed to price bond markets are unlikely sources of priced risk, and only one novel tradable bond factor, capturing the bond post-earnings announcement drift, should be included in the stochastic discount factor (SDF) with very high probability. Nevertheless, the SDF is dense in the space of observable factors, with both nontradable and equity-based ones being salient for pricing corporate bonds. A Bayesian model averaging–SDF explains corporate risk premia better than all existing models, both in- and out-of-sample, and captures business cycle and market crash risks

EFA2024_761_AP 21_The Corporate Bond Factor Zoo.pdf


ID: 2034

Interdealer Price Dispersion

Shuo Liu1, Andrea Eisfeldt2, Bernard Herskovic2

1Tsinghua University, China, People's Republic of; 2UCLA Anderson School, Department of Finance

Discussant: Giorgio Ottonello (Nova School of Business and Economics)

Intermediation capacity varies across dealers, and as a result, misallocation of credit risk reduces the risk-bearing capacity of the dealer sector and increases effective market-level risk aversion. When the efficient reallocation of credit risk within the dealer sector is impaired, interdealer price dispersion increases. Empirically, when interdealer price dispersion increases, bond prices decrease. Interdealer price dispersion explains a substantial portion of bond yield spread changes, the cross-section of bond returns, and the changes in the basis between bond spread and fair-value spreads. We conclude interdealer frictions reduce the risk-bearing capacity of intermediaries and are crucial for intermediary bond pricing.

EFA2024_2034_AP 21_Interdealer Price Dispersion.pdf


 
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