Editor's Letter

Amanda Peterson-Plunkett
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Abstract

orporate bonds are the focus of this issue of The Journal of Fixed Income. This topic is quite relevant and timely given the recent stock market decline, falling corporate profits, and the large number of downgrades by bond rating agencies. In the lead article, David Brown provides a framework for analyzing credit spread innovations. Important components of these innovations include maturity specific, time varying liquidity and risk premiums. The empirical findings for different credit quality and maturity portfolios are consistent with the economic predictions from the Longstaff and Schwartz model of the default margin. In the next article, Karan Bhanot provides useful empirical evidence on selecting the appropriate specification for the dynamics of credit spreads. This evidence is particularly important to trading strategies that depend on the mean reversion of credit spreads. The question of credit rating consistency has been the focus of many empirical investigations. Cantor and Falkenstein provide a careful statistical analysis and re-examination of whether default rates by credit rating categories are consistent across sectors and over time. They show that the introduction of sector and macroeconomic shocks inflates the sample standard deviations and provide evidence that inconsistencies generated by a simple binomial default probability are actually not statistically significant. The growing market for credit swaps provides an excellent risk management tool for corporate bond managers. Jason Wei presents a sophisticated valuation model for credit swaps that utilize both firm value and rating transition information. Hence, firm-specific asset return volatility can then be used to explain the variation in swap premiums for bonds in the same rating class. In the next article, Reilly and Wright investigate the composition and characteristics of the high yield corporate bond market. In particular, their empirical finding supports the risk sharing intuition associated with an increasing equity effect as rating quality declines. Furthermore, it is also useful to note that the market interest rate effect declines with quality. Hence, it is not surprising that high yield managers are more focused on much the same business fundamentals as an equity analyst. In the following article, Fredman and Reising examine another below investment grade market, leveraged loans investments. They show that as the market for leveraged loan investments evolved, pricing efficiency resulted in the decline of return and STANLEY J. KON Editor AMANDA J. EADS Editorial Assistant
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公司债券是本期《固定收益杂志》关注的焦点。考虑到最近股市下跌、企业利润下降以及债券评级机构大量下调评级,这个话题是非常相关和及时的。在第一篇文章中,David Brown提供了一个分析信用利差创新的框架。这些创新的重要组成部分包括特定期限、时变流动性和风险溢价。不同信用质量和期限组合的实证结果与Longstaff和Schwartz模型对违约保证金的经济预测一致。在下一篇文章中,Karan Bhanot将提供有用的经验证据,说明如何为信用息差动态选择合适的规范。这一证据对于依赖于信用利差均值回归的交易策略尤为重要。信用评级一致性问题一直是许多实证研究的焦点。康托尔和法肯斯坦提供了仔细的统计分析,并重新审视了不同信用评级类别的违约率在不同行业和不同时期是否一致。他们表明,部门冲击和宏观经济冲击的引入使样本标准差膨胀,并提供证据表明,由简单的二项违约概率产生的不一致性实际上在统计上并不显著。不断增长的信用掉期市场为公司债券经理提供了一个极好的风险管理工具。Jason Wei提出了一个复杂的信用互换估值模型,该模型同时利用了公司价值和评级转换信息。因此,公司特定的资产回报波动率可以用来解释相同评级类别的债券互换溢价的变化。在下一篇文章中,Reilly和Wright将研究高收益公司债券市场的构成和特征。特别是,他们的实证发现支持风险分担直觉,这种直觉与评级质量下降时股权效应增加有关。此外,值得注意的是,市场利率效应随着质量的下降而下降。因此,高收益基金经理更关注与股票分析师大致相同的企业基本面,这并不奇怪。在下面的文章中,Fredman和Reising研究了另一个低于投资级的市场,杠杆贷款投资。他们表明,随着杠杆贷款投资市场的发展,定价效率导致了回报的下降
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