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We value rating-triggered step-up bonds with three methods: (i) the Jarrow, Lando and
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In this paper we compare market prices of credit default swaps with model prices. We show
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We consider eight different measures (issued amount, coupon, listed, age, missing
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Abstract: In this paper we compare market prices of credit default swaps with model prices. We show that a simple reduced form model with a constant recovery rate outperforms the market practice of directly comparing bonds' credit spreads to default swap premiums. We find that the model works...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010837529
In this paper we compare market prices of credit default swaps with model prices. We show that a simple reduced form model with a constant recovery rate outperforms the market practice of directly comparing bonds' credit spreads to default swap premiums. We find that the model works well for...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010837767
We consider eight different proxies (issued amount, coupon, listed, age, missing prices, yield volatility, number of contributors and yield dispersion) to measure corporate bond liquidity and use a five-variable model to control for interest rate risk, credit risk, maturity, rating and currency...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010837780
We value rating-triggered step-up bonds with three methods: (i) the Jarrow, Lando and Turnbull (1997, JLT) framework, (ii) a similar framework using historical probabilities and (iii) as plain vanilla bonds. We find that the market seems to value single step-up bonds according to the JLT model,...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10010837921