TY - UNPB
T1 - (In)frequently Traded Corporate Bonds
AU - Ivashchenko, Alexey
AU - Neklyudov, Artem
PY - 2019/1/8
Y1 - 2019/1/8
N2 - We study a large group of bonds that experience substantial and long-lasting swings in trading activity. We call these bonds (in)frequently traded. They are similar to other bonds in primary bond characteristics, and publicly observed changes in these characteristics do not explain the swings in trading activity. We link jumps in trading activity of (in)frequently traded bonds to mutual fund rebalancing and document that more active trading in these bonds is associated with positive abnormal returns, but only after the 2008 crisis. Our results suggest that returns are due to growing mutual fund demand for (in)frequently traded bonds amid limited post-crisis secondary market supply, but the exact forces behind abnormal returns largely remain a puzzle.
AB - We study a large group of bonds that experience substantial and long-lasting swings in trading activity. We call these bonds (in)frequently traded. They are similar to other bonds in primary bond characteristics, and publicly observed changes in these characteristics do not explain the swings in trading activity. We link jumps in trading activity of (in)frequently traded bonds to mutual fund rebalancing and document that more active trading in these bonds is associated with positive abnormal returns, but only after the 2008 crisis. Our results suggest that returns are due to growing mutual fund demand for (in)frequently traded bonds amid limited post-crisis secondary market supply, but the exact forces behind abnormal returns largely remain a puzzle.
KW - corporate bond returns
KW - trading frequency
KW - mutual fund rebalancing
KW - over-the-counter markets
U2 - https://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3306124
DO - https://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3306124
M3 - Working paper
BT - (In)frequently Traded Corporate Bonds
ER -