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Market and Funding Liquidity/Market Risk Factors

Paper Session

Saturday, Jan. 4, 2025 8:00 AM - 10:00 AM (PST)

San Francisco Marriott Marquis, Yerba Buena Salon 1 & 2
Hosted By: American Finance Association
  • Bige Kahraman, University of Oxford

Market Opacity and Fragility: Why Liquidity Evaporates when it is most Needed

Giovanni Cespa
,
City University of London
Xavier Vives
,
University of Navarra

Abstract

Concern for the stability and resilience of financial markets has recently revived, in the wake of the sizeable number of "flash events'' that have occurred in recent years. A unifying characteristic of these episodes seems to be the jamming of the ""rationing'' function of market illiquidity. In ""normal'' conditions

Liquidity Provision in a One-Sided Market: The Role of Dealer-Hedge Fund Relations

Mathias Kruttli
,
Indiana University
Marco Macchiavelli
,
University of Massachusetts
Phillip Monin
,
Federal Reserve Board
Alex Zhou
,
Southern Methodist University

Abstract

During times of stress when demand for liquidity surges, dealers' willingness to provide liquidity is essential to the proper functioning of the U.S. corporate bond market. The existing literature on bond market liquidity emphasizes the roles played by funding costs and the regulatory reforms passed in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis. However, what determines dealers’ willingness to intermediate trades when the market becomes one-sided is still to be fully understood. We show that dealers' prime brokerage relations with certain hedge funds help improve their liquidity provision in a one-sided market. During the March 2020 liquidity crisis, hedge funds increased their corporate bond positions when the bond market faced excessive selling pressures. Dealers with stronger connections to hedge funds that are natural buyers of corporate bonds charged lower transaction costs on heavily sold bonds. Dealers' leverage and funding constraints do not explain our results, nor do connections with hedge funds that are natural buyers of other asset classes. We find that hedge funds that were larger and better able to absorb risk provided more liquidity during the crisis. Our findings reveal that dealers' willingness to provide liquidity in a one-sided market depends on their connections with natural buyers of corporate bonds.

Rethinking Transparency - Evidence from a Quasi-Natural Experiment

Jeff Meli
,
Barclays
Zornitsa Todorova
,
Barclays
Andrea Diaz
,
Barclays

Abstract

We develop a model of market making that incorporates the cost of dealer inventory and the level of adverse selection. With a high cost and low adverse selection, which we argue describes the current corporate bond market, dealers engage in both principal and agent trading. Trade transparency reduces volumes by shifting more trades into the (uncertain) agent protocol, and increases bid-offer of principal trades, particularly for bonds that are hard to “match” in agent trades. To test these predictions, we construct a novel database of euro corporate bond transactions. We exploit exogenous variation in transparency generated by Brexit, and show that transparency decreases transaction costs for small trades but increases transaction costs by 23% for larger and more difficult to match trades. Our results can be used to inform policy makers in light of recent proposals to shorten reporting delays for corporate bond transactions in Europe.

Constraint-Induced Factors

Samuel Slocum
,
Yale University
Kaushik Vasudevan
,
Purdue University

Abstract

We propose a new way to quantify portfolio investment frictions. Representing any given friction as a constraint, it's emph{Constraint-Induced Factor} is the tracking error from replicating the tangency portfolio subject to the constraint. Constraint-Induced Factors carry a structural interpretation in a standard asset pricing framework, where their price of risk corresponds to the mass of affected capital and the marginal cost of the associated friction in risk-sharing terms. In empirical applications to global bond markets, we show that the magnitude of pricing effects associated with U.S. Treasury convenience and capital controls for Chinese government bonds is consistent with 20-25% of global bond market capital being constrained to invest in each of those markets. We also discuss applications to stock markets, including ESG investing and indexing.

Discussant(s)
Michael Sockin
,
University of Texas-Austin
George Aragon
,
Arizona State University
Kumar Venkataraman
,
Southern Methodist University
Carter Davis
,
Indiana University
JEL Classifications
  • G1 - General Financial Markets