Monthly Archives: September 2016

Schneider, M., Lillo, F., and Pelizzon, L. (2016) How Has Sovereign Bond Market Liquidity Changed? – An Illiquidity Spillover Analysis. SAFE Working Paper No. 151

Abstract

Amid increasing regulation, structural changes of the market and Quantitative Easing as well as extremely low yields, concerns about the market liquidity of the Eurozone sovereign debt markets have been raised. We aim to quantify illiquidity risks, especially such related to liquidity dry-ups, and illiquidity spillover across maturities by examining the reaction to illiquidity shocks at high frequencies in two ways:
a) the regular response to shocks using a variance decomposition and,
b) the response to shocks in the extremes by detecting illiquidity shocks and modeling those as ultivariate Hawkes processes.
We find that:
a) market liquidity is more fragile and less predictable when an asset is very illiquid and,
b) the response to shocks in the extremes is structurally different from the regular response.
In 2015 long-term bonds are less liquid and the medium-term bonds are liquid, although we observe that in the extremes the medium-term bonds are increasingly driven by illiquidity spillover from the long-term titles.

https://ssrn.com/abstract=2853459

Gabriele La Spada, “Competition, reach for yield, and money market funds”

Tuesday September 13 2016
11:00
Scuola Normale Superiore
Aula Bianchi

Gabriele La Spada
Federal Reserve Bank of New York

Abstract

Do asset managers reach for yield because of competitive pressures in a low-rate environment? I propose a tournament model of money market funds (MMFs) to study this issue. When funds care about relative performance, an increase in the risk premium leads funds with lower default costs to increase risk-taking, while funds with higher default costs decrease risk-taking. Without changes in the premium, lower risk-free rates reduce the risk-taking of all funds. I show that these predictions are consistent with MMF risk-taking during the 2002-08 period and that rank-based performance is indeed a key determinant of money flows to MMFs.