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Systematic Variation in Yield Spreads for Tax-Exempt General Obligation Bonds

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 April 2009

Extract

In recent years much research has centered upon whether yield differentials between bonds which differ in default risk vary systematically over the business cycle. Theory suggests that during a cyclical upswing the yield differential (or risk premium) narrows, while during a downswing the differential widens. The cyclical behavior of yield spreads is well documented in the corporate bond market [4, 8, 12, 16]. This effect has only recently been given attention in the tax-exempt bond market [1, 11]. In addition, the municipal bond market may be segmented. If tax-exempt borrowers and investors are unable to substitute between tax-exempt securities of varying default risk, changes in the relative supply of and demand for these classes of securities could produce systematic fluctuations in tax-exempt yield differentials. These effects could be produced by regulatory statutes which require that banks purchase high-grade securities and the fixed nature of bond ratings.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © School of Business Administration, University of Washington 1981

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References

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