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Corporate Bond Default Risk: A 150-year perspective

by Kay Giesecke of Stanford University,
Francis A. Longstaff of University of California, Los Angeles,
Stephen M. Schaefer of the London Business School, and
Ilya Strebulaev of Stanford University

February 2011

Abstract: We study corporate bond default rates using an extensive new data set spanning the 1866--2008 period. We find that the corporate bond market has repeatedly suffered clustered default events much worse than those experienced during the Great Depression. For example, during the railroad crisis of 1873--1875, total defaults amounted to 36 percent of the par value of the entire corporate bond market. We examine whether corporate default rates are best forecast by structural, reduced-form, or macroeconomic credit models and find that variables suggested by structural models outperform the others. Default events are only weakly correlated with business downturns. We find that over the long term, credit spreads are roughly twice as large as default losses, resulting in an average credit risk premium of about 80 basis points. We also find that credit spreads do not adjust in response to realized default rates.

Published in: Journal of Financial Economics, Vol. 102, No. 2, (November 2011), pp. 233-250.

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Forthcoming in: Journal of Financial Economics.

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