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I model how corporate bond prices are affected by search frictions and occasional selling pressures and test my predictions empirically. A key prediction is that in a distressed market with more sellers than buyers, prices paid by large traders decrease more than those of small traders. Using a...
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Recent decades have witnessed several waves of buyout activity. We find LBOs to be a significant concern for bondholders by showing that a) intra-industry credit spreads increase upon an LBO announcement, b) yields on bonds without event risk covenants are, on average, 21bps higher than those on...
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We ask whether a standard structural model (Black and Cox (1976)) is able to explain credit spreads on corporate bonds and, in contrast to much of the literature, we find that the model matches the level of investment grade spreads well. Model spreads for speculative grade debt are too low and...
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This paper introduces a measure that captures the premium in bond prices that is due to the value of creditor control. We estimate the premium as the difference in the bond price and an equivalent synthetic bond without control rights that is constructed using CDS contracts. Empirically, we find...
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Models of capital structure and credit risk make predictions about market valuations of debt, but are routinely tested on the basis of book debt from common data sources. In this paper, we propose to close this gap. We construct a rich data set on firm level debt market valuations by carefully...
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