LinWangWUJFMFINAL.pdf (1.06 MB)
Download filePredictions of corporate bond excess returns
In this paper, we investigate the predictability of corporate bond excess returns using a comprehensive data sample for the period from January 1973 to December 2010. We find that corporate bond returns are more predictable than stock returns, and the predictability tends to be higher for low-grade bonds and short-maturity bonds. A forward rate factor captures substantial variations in expected bond excess returns. Furthermore, liquidity factors and a bond's credit spread have predictive power on corporate bond excess returns. Combining these variables with traditional predictors significantly improves the performance of the predictive model for corporate bond returns.
History
Preferred citation
Lin, H., Wang, J. & Wu, C. (2014). Predictions of corporate bond excess returns. Journal of Financial Markets, 21, 123-152. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.finmar.2014.08.003Publisher DOI
Journal title
Journal of Financial MarketsVolume
21Publication date
01/11/2014Pagination
123-152Publisher
Elsevier BVPublication status
PublishedContribution type
ArticleOnline publication date
28/08/2014ISSN
1386-4181eISSN
1878-576XLanguage
enUsage metrics
Read the peer-reviewed publication
Keywords
Return predictabilityDefault premiumTerm premiumDurationCredit spreadsLiquiditySocial SciencesBusiness, FinanceBusiness & EconomicsEXPECTED STOCK RETURNSASSET-ALLOCATION PERSPECTIVEEQUITY PREMIUM PREDICTIONLIQUIDITY RISKDIVIDEND YIELDSMARKET RETURNSBUSINESS-CYCLECROSS-SECTIONDEFAULT RISKPREDICTABILITYFinance