Commonality in Credit Spread Changes: Dealer Inventory and Intermediary Distress

A-Tier
Journal: The Review of Financial Studies
Year: 2022
Volume: 35
Issue: 10
Pages: 4630-4673

Authors (3)

Zhiguo He (Stanford University) Paymon Khorrami (not in RePEc) Zhaogang Song (not in RePEc)

Score contribution per author:

1.341 = (α=2.01 / 3 authors) × 2.0x A-tier

α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count

Abstract

Two intermediary-based factors—a corporate bond dealer inventory measure and a broad intermediary distress measure—explain more than 40 of the puzzling common variation in credit spread changes beyond canonical structural factors. A simple intermediary-based model with partial market segmentation accounts for intermediary factors’ explanatory power and delivers three further implications with empirical support. First, whereas bond sorts on risk-related variables produce monotonic loading patterns on intermediary factors, non-risk-related sorts produce no pattern. Second, dealer inventory comoves with corporate-credit assets only, whereas intermediary distress comoves with both corporate-credit and non-corporate-credit assets. Third, dealers’ inventory responds to (instrumented) bond sales by institutional investors.

Technical Details

RePEc Handle
repec:oup:rfinst:v:35:y:2022:i:10:p:4630-4673.
Journal Field
Finance
Author Count
3
Added to Database
2026-02-02