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Rating, Credit Spread, and Pricing Risky Debt: Empirical Study on Taiwan's Security Market

Ken Hung, +2 more
- 01 Jan 2006 - 
- Vol. 7, Iss: 2, pp 405-424
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TLDR
Wang et al. as discussed by the authors applied Vasicek (1977) model into Merton's (1974) option framework and obtained a closed-form solution of the options model to evaluate the credit risk of corporate bond in the fixed income market of Taiwan.
Abstract
This paper focuses on evaluating the credit risk of corporate bond in the fixed income market of Taiwan. We apply Vasicek (1977) model into Merton’s (1974) option framework and obtain a closed-form solution of the options model. The solution algorithm employs the Newton-Raphson method in combination with the inverse quadratic interpolation and bisection technique of Dekker (1967) to find out the roots and calculate the credit spread. The result shows that the average credit spread is 1.346%, and the credit spread of TSE (Taiwan Stock Exchange) listed firm is higher than that of OTC firms, while the one with bank guarantee is higher than the one without. We find negative correlation between VaR rating, TEJ (Taiwan Economic Journal) rating and credit spread, implying that the higher the market risk is, the lower the required premium is by the bondholders, and credit spread is expected to be lower. Testing the hypothesis of Duee (1998), we find a negative correlation between the Taiwan Stock weighted index and credit spread. It implies that the term structure of interest rate is an upward type. As firm’s equity value rises, the index return follows suit. While the bond default probability decreases, and the credit spread is expected to decrease. c 2006 Peking University Press

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Credit Spreads during the Global Financial Crisis: Evidence from the Japanese Bond Market

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Investigating the Determinants of Credit Spread Using a Markov Regime-Switching Model: Evidence from Banks in Taiwan

Su-Lien Lu, +1 more
- 24 Aug 2021 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the determinants of credit spread using a Markov regime-switching model, which is superior to other models in capturing different effects in various regimes.
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Pricing Stock and Bond Options when the Default-Free Rate is Stochastic

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors derive formulas for the valuation of call options on stocks and bonds when the default free rate is stochastic and highlight the role of the correlation between the unanticipated returns on the underlying security and the changes in the short-term rate in determining the options value.
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Convertible bond valuation: an empirical test

TL;DR: This article applied the options pricing model to the valuation of convertible bonds and found that the results indicated that without risk adjustment, the returns for the subsample identified by the model as "undervalued" (model prices exceed market prices) are significantly greater than returns for a subsample classified as "overvalued" or "market prices exceed model prices".
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