The Rebirth of the Corporate Bond Market
• Author(s): Bill Robinson, John Raven & Christopher Chua
• Published: June 2001
• Pages in paper: 32
Abstract
There has been a major switch from equity to debt finance in recent years,
associated with a fall in the long-term rate of interest. The paper explores the
macro-economic causes of the sea change in interest rates (lower budget deficits,
independent central banks, lower inflation expectations) and the micro-economic
consequences. Firms are taking on more debt partly for tax reasons and partly
because at lower interest rates they have better interest cover. This means they
can increase their borrowing at lower risk and hence at lower cost.
An examination of a cross section of UK firms from the FTSE 350 shows two
major influences on the debt-to-value ratio of large firms. Firms with healthy cash
flow are allowed to borrow against that income; and firms whose income is
relatively invariant across the economic cycle (as measured by a low asset beta)
can afford a higher level of debt.
Register for personal access to all papers for just £47.99
To download papers you need a subscription to World Economics Journal.
Get access to the full 20 year archive of thousands of papers and abstracts.
Order online now for 1 years immediate access for 1 user via username/password.
You do not need a PayPal account to pay by card.
Institutional Subscriptions, Contact Us
Existing Subscriber Log-in