Liquidity risk and the covered bond market in times of crisis: empirical evidence from Germany

被引:0
|
作者
Christoph Wegener
Tobias Basse
Philipp Sibbertsen
Duc Khuong Nguyen
机构
[1] Institute of Economics,Institute for Statistics
[2] Norddeutsche Landesbank Girozentrale,IPAG Lab
[3] Touro College Berlin,undefined
[4] Leibniz Universität Hannover,undefined
[5] IPAG Business School,undefined
来源
关键词
Liquidity risk; Covered bonds; Fractional cointegration; C22; G01; G21;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Liquidity risk is the risk that an asset cannot always be sold without causing a fall in its price because of a lack of demand for this asset. Many empirical studies examining liquidity premia have focused on government bonds. In this paper, we specifically investigate the yield differentials between liquid and illiquid German covered bonds by considering the yields of traditional Pfandbrief bonds and Jumbo Pfandbrief bonds with different maturities. In terms of credit risk the spread between the yields of these two types of covered bonds should be zero. Moreover, assuming that the liquidity risk premium is a stationary variable the yields of Pfandbrief bonds and Jumbo Pfandbrief bonds (which seem to be integrated of order one) should be cointegrated. We make use of the methodology proposed in the related field of fractional integrated models to conduct our empirical analysis. Due to the 2008–2009 global financial crisis, it also seems to be appropriate to consider structural change. To the extent that the European Central Bank has started to purchase covered bonds under the crisis pressure, our empirical evidence would have a high relevance for monetary policymakers as far as the liquidity risk is concerned. Here, our results indicate fractionally cointegrated yields before and after the crisis, while the degree of integration of the spread increases strongly during the crisis.
引用
收藏
页码:407 / 426
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Liquidity risk and the covered bond market in times of crisis: empirical evidence from Germany
    Wegener, Christoph
    Basse, Tobias
    Sibbertsen, Philipp
    Duc Khuong Nguyen
    ANNALS OF OPERATIONS RESEARCH, 2019, 282 (1-2) : 407 - 426
  • [2] Liquidity and credit risk before and after the global financial crisis: Evidence from the Korean corporate bond market
    Shin, Dongheon
    Kim, Baeho
    PACIFIC-BASIN FINANCE JOURNAL, 2015, 33 : 38 - 61
  • [3] MARKET LIQUIDITY OF SHARES AND YIELD FROM MUTUAL FUNDS IN TIMES OF CRISIS: CANADIAN EVIDENCE
    Beaulieu, Marie-Claude
    Carrier, Simon
    Guimond, Jean-Francois
    ACTUALITE ECONOMIQUE, 2015, 91 (04): : 399 - 420
  • [4] The pricing of systematic liquidity risk: Empirical evidence from the US stock market
    Gibson, R
    Mougeot, N
    JOURNAL OF BANKING & FINANCE, 2004, 28 (01) : 157 - 178
  • [5] Seasonal liquidity effects and their determinants on the covered bond market
    Weigerding, Michael
    QUARTERLY REVIEW OF ECONOMICS AND FINANCE, 2020, 78 : 288 - 303
  • [6] Liquidity Level or Liquidity Risk? Evidence from the Financial Crisis
    Lou, Xiaoxia
    Sadka, Ronnie
    FINANCIAL ANALYSTS JOURNAL, 2011, 67 (03) : 51 - 62
  • [7] Liquidity in the liquidity crisis: evidence from Divisia monetary aggregates in Germany and the European crisis countries
    El-Shagi, Makram
    Kelly, Logan J.
    ECONOMICS BULLETIN, 2014, 34 (01): : 63 - 72
  • [8] Bond market liquidity in China: An empirical analysis
    Zheng, C
    Xu, YM
    Dong, JC
    Wang, Z
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2005 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON MANAGEMENT SCIENCE & ENGINEERING (12TH), VOLS 1- 3, 2005, : 1871 - 1875
  • [9] An empirical analysis of stock and bond market liquidity
    Chordia, T
    Sarkar, A
    Subrahmanyam, A
    REVIEW OF FINANCIAL STUDIES, 2005, 18 (01): : 85 - 129
  • [10] Funding liquidity and equity liquidity in the subprime crisis period: Evidence from the ETF market
    Chiu, Junmao
    Chung, Huimin
    Ho, Keng-Yu
    Wang, George H. K.
    JOURNAL OF BANKING & FINANCE, 2012, 36 (09) : 2660 - 2671