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We show that accounting information releases generate large and immediate price impacts, i.e. jumps, in credit default swap (CDS) spreads. Our approach is multivariate, which allows for identification of information events under the presence of confounding news, such as credit events and other...
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Observable covariates are useful for predicting default under the natural measure, but several findings question their value for explaining credit spreads under the pricing measure. We introduce a discrete time no-arbitrage model with observable covariates, which allows for a closed form...
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We specify and estimate no-arbitrage models that value sovereign CDS contracts by assuming that the country's default intensity depends on observable economic and financial indicators. We estimate these models using a sample of twenty-eight countries, three CDS maturities, and over a decade of...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013057131
Rather than assuming a fixed recovery rate in estimation, we estimate recovery rates from CDS spreads, using three years of daily data on 152 corporates. We use a quadratic pricing model which ensures nonnegative default probabilities and recovery rates. The estimated cross-section of recovery...
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