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Is There A Distress Risk Anomaly ? : Corporate Bond Spread As A Proxy for Default Risk / Yildizhan, Celim

World Bank Open Knowledge Repository (formerly "World Bank E-Library Publications") Available online

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Format:
Book
Government document
Author/Creator:
Yildizhan, Celim
Contributor:
Anginer, Deniz
Yildizhan, Celim
Series:
Policy research working papers.
World Bank e-Library.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Accounting.
Bankruptcy.
Bankruptcy and Resolution of Financial Distress.
Bond ratings.
Bond Spread.
Capital Asset Pricing.
Corporate Bond.
Corporate bonds.
Corporate defaults.
Credit rating.
Credit risk.
Credit spread.
Credit spreads.
Debt.
Debt Markets.
Default Risk.
Deposit Insurance.
Economic Theory & Research.
Equity returns.
Finance and Financial Sector Development.
Fixed Income.
Human capital.
International Bank.
Macroeconomics and Economic Growth.
Mutual Funds.
Probability of default.
Stocks.
Local Subjects:
Accounting.
Bankruptcy.
Bankruptcy and Resolution of Financial Distress.
Bond ratings.
Bond Spread.
Capital Asset Pricing.
Corporate Bond.
Corporate bonds.
Corporate defaults.
Credit rating.
Credit risk.
Credit spread.
Credit spreads.
Debt.
Debt Markets.
Default Risk.
Deposit Insurance.
Economic Theory & Research.
Equity returns.
Finance and Financial Sector Development.
Fixed Income.
Human capital.
International Bank.
Macroeconomics and Economic Growth.
Mutual Funds.
Probability of default.
Stocks.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (49 pages)
Other Title:
Is There A Distress Risk Anomaly ?
Place of Publication:
Washington, D.C., The World Bank, 2010
System Details:
data file
Summary:
Although financial theory suggests a positive relationship between default risk and equity returns, recent empirical papers find anomalously low returns for stocks with high probabilities of default. The authors show that returns to distressed stocks previously documented are really an amalgamation of anomalies associated with three stock characteristics - leverage, volatility and profitability. In this paper they use a market based measure - corporate credit spreads - to proxy for default risk. Unlike previously used measures that proxy for a firm's real-world probability of default, credit spreads proxy for a risk-adjusted (or a risk-neutral) probability of default and thereby explicitly account for the systematic component of distress risk. The authors show that credit spreads predict corporate defaults better than previously used measures, such as, bond ratings, accounting variables and structural model parameters. They do not find default risk to be significantly priced in the cross-section of equity returns. There is also no evidence of firms with high default risk delivering anomalously low returns.

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