State and Local Government
(Municipal)
U.S. Government
Long-Term Bonds
Corporate Baa Bonds
Annual
Yield (%)
Corporate Aaa Bonds
1940
1930
1920
F I G U R E 5 . 1
Long-Term Bond Yields, 1919–2010
Sources: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Banking and Monetary Statistics, 1941–1970;
Federal Reserve:
www.federalreserve.gov/releases/h15/data.htm
.
In addition, the spread between the interest rates on Baa corporate bonds (riskier than
Aaa corporate bonds) and U.S. government bonds is very large during the Great
Depression years 1930–1933, is smaller during the 1940s–1960s, and then widens again
afterward. Which factors are responsible for these phenomena?
Default Risk
One attribute of a bond that influences its interest rate is its risk of default, which
occurs when the issuer of the bond is unable or unwilling to make interest payments
when promised or pay off the face value when the bond matures. A corporation suf-
fering big losses, such as the major airline companies like United, Delta, US Airways,
and Northwest in the mid-2000s, might be more likely to suspend interest payments
on its bonds. The default risk on its bonds would therefore be quite high. By contrast,
U.S. Treasury bonds have usually been considered to have no default risk because
the federal government can always increase taxes to pay off its obligations. Bonds
like these with no default risk are called default-free bonds. The spread between
the interest rates on bonds with default risk and default-free bonds, both of the same
maturity, called the risk premium, indicates how much additional interest people
must earn to be willing to hold that risky bond. Our supply-and-demand analysis of
the bond market in Chapter 4 can be used to explain why a bond with default risk
always has a positive risk premium and why the higher the default risk is, the larger
the risk premium will be.
To examine the effect of default risk on interest rates, let us look at the supply-
and-demand diagrams for the default-free (U.S. Treasury) and corporate long-term
bond markets in Figure 5.2. To make the diagrams somewhat easier to read, let’s
assume that initially corporate bonds have the same default risk as U.S. Treasury
bonds. In this case, these two bonds have the same attributes (identical risk and
maturity); their equilibrium prices and interest rates will initially be equal (
and
), and the risk premium on corporate bonds (
) will be zero.
If the possibility of a default increases because a corporation begins to suffer large
losses, the default risk on corporate bonds will increase, and the expected return
on these bonds will decrease. In addition, the corporate bond’s return will be more
uncertain. The theory of asset demand predicts that because the expected return
on the corporate bond falls relative to the expected return on the default-free
Treasury bond while its relative riskiness rises, the corporate bond is less desirable
(holding everything else equal), and demand for it will fall. Another way of think-
ing about this is that if you were an investor, you would want to hold (demand) a
smaller amount of corporate bonds. The demand curve for corporate bonds in panel
(a) of Figure 5.2 then shifts to the left, from
to
At the same time, the expected return on default-free Treasury bonds increases
relative to the expected return on corporate bonds, while their relative riskiness
declines. The Treasury bonds thus become more desirable, and demand rises, as
shown in panel (b) by the rightward shift in the demand curve for these bonds
from to .
As we can see in Figure 5.2, the equilibrium price for corporate bonds falls from
to
, and since the bond price is negatively related to the interest rate, the equilibrium
interest rate on corporate bonds rises to . At the same time, however, the equilibrium
price for the Treasury bonds rises from
to
, and the equilibrium interest rate
falls to . The spread between the interest rates on corporate and default-free bonds—
that is, the risk premium on corporate bonds—has risen from zero to
– . We can
now conclude that a bond with default risk will always have a positive risk
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |