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Liquidity provision for corporate bonds has become significantly more expensive after the 2008 crisis. Using index exclusions as a natural experiment during which uninformed index trackers request immediacy, we find that the cost of immediacy has more than doubled. In addition, the supply of...
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Liquidity provision in the corporate bond market has become significantly more expensive after the 2008 credit crisis. Using index exclusions as a natural experiment during which uninformed index trackers request immediacy, we find that the price of immediacy has doubled for short-term...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012969152
We document that in M&As a significant proportion of targets' equity is owned by financial institutions that simultaneously own targets' bonds (“dual holders”). Targets with larger equity ownership by dual holders have lower M&A equity premia and larger abnormal bond returns, particularly...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013062358
Corporate bond ETFs provide stable funding to US companies, with pricing and real effects. ETF ownership reduces the yield spreads for bonds directly owned and for the other bonds of the same issuer. This lower cost of debt enables financially constrained firms to invest in risky projects....
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We investigate the effects of short sale constraints on asset mispricing in the corporate bond market. Consistent with Miller (1977)'s theory that short sale constraints can lead to asset overpricing, we document a significant positive relation between changes in ownership breadth (a proxy for...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012852980