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Viral Acharya, Stephen Schaefer, and Yili Zhang* London Business School

Liquidity Risk and Correlation Risk: A Clinical Study of the General Motors and Ford Downgrade of May 2005. Viral Acharya, Stephen Schaefer, and Yili Zhang* London Business School. Autumn Seminar 2008 of Inquire Europe Oct ober 6 th , 2008. Liquidity Risk and Correlation Risk.

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Viral Acharya, Stephen Schaefer, and Yili Zhang* London Business School

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  1. Liquidity Risk and Correlation Risk: A Clinical Study of the General Motors and Ford Downgrade of May 2005 Viral Acharya, Stephen Schaefer, and Yili Zhang*London Business School Autumn Seminar 2008 of Inquire Europe October 6th, 2008

  2. Liquidity Risk and Correlation Risk • May 2005, GM and Ford downgraded to junk status • Major sell-off of GM and Ford bonds • Sharp increase of in spreads ofGM, Ford CDS and bonds • Spreads on other names also increased • Appears that anidiosyncratic shock to GM and Ford resulted in an increase in their co-movement with other assets – correlation risk • Empirically test:correlation riskis linked to liquidity riskthrough constraints of financial intermediaries

  3. CDS spreads for GM and Ford and Consumer Services

  4. Liquidity Risk and Correlation Risk • May 2005, GM and Ford downgraded to junk status • Major sell-off of GM and Ford bonds • Sharp increase of spreads on GM, Ford CDS and bonds • Spreads on other names also increased • Appears that anidiosyncratic shock to GM and Ford resulted in an increase in their co-movement with other credits – correlation risk • Hypothesis:correlation riskis linked to liquidity riskthrough constraints of financial intermediaries

  5. Link between liquidity risk and correlation risk • Due to limited capital available for intermediation activity, liquidity risk faced by intermediaries can induce correlation risk for investors in the form of excess co-movement in asset prices (see, for example, Brunnermeier and Pedersen (2005)) • Faced with liquidity risk (holding large inventory of an asset), intermediaries reduce market-making services • Reduction in liquidity may be pervasive, extending to other assets for which they make markets • This induces an excess co-movement in prices (beyond fundamentals)

  6. Hypothesis: correlation risk is linked to liquidity risk through constraints of financial intermediaries • Around the downgrade, quotes in GM and Ford bonds by intermediaries became highly imbalanced,with more offers than bids • This evidence suggests that intermediaries held large inventory of GM and Ford bonds and faced significant liquidity risk • Concurrently,co-movement in CDS across many different industries increased significantly • Quote imbalance in GM and Ford bonds, a measure of liquidity risk faced by market-makers, explains a significant portion of the excess CDSco-movement • Robustness checks suggest that this relationship was likely causal

  7. The GM and Ford downgrade • On May 5, 2005, S&P downgraded the debt of GM and Ford to junk status: • S&P lowered GM and GMAC from BBB- to BB, and Ford and FMCC from BBB- to BB+, and maintained a negative outlook for both • The amount of debt affected by the downgrade was enormous: • GM (including GMAC): $292 billion; Ford (including FMCC): $161 billion • # 2 and # 3 in Lehman's U.S. Credit Index (2.02% and 1.97%) • When moved to Lehman’s High Yield Index, GM represents 6% , Ford 5.9%

  8. Daily 5-year CDS spreads for GM and Ford S&P downgrade both GM and Ford to junk GM profit warning

  9. Massive sell-off of GM and Ford • Many insurance companies, pension funds, endowments, and other investment fundsfaced regulatory or charter restrictionson holding junk securities • Investors who tracked IGbond indices: • GM and Ford fell out of Lehman’s and Merrill Lynch’s IG indices • Market had difficulty absorbing the large supply of GM and Ford bonds

  10. Massive sell-off of GM and Ford– contd “Based on average Trace volumes in April, [we estimate] the market could clear [the amount of debt moving from investment grade holders to high yield holders] in just under four months of trading for both GM and Ford.” - Bank of America, Situation Room (May 3-5, 2005) • Next, evidence on imbalance in quotes for GM and Ford bonds

  11. Bond Imbalance • Novel dataset of corporate bonds quotes from MarketAxess • A leading electronic, multi-dealer to client platform for U.S. and European corporate bond trading • Daily bond quotes from all dealer-brokers trading on the MarketAxess platform (Sept 11, 2003 to May 19, 2006) • Three proxies for daily quote imbalance • Imbalance %: difference in volume of offers and bids

  12. Average GM and Ford Imbalance % in six sub-periods

  13. Three Key Steps • Around the downgrade, quotes in GM and Ford bonds by intermediaries became highly imbalanced,with more offers than bids • This evidence suggests that intermediaries held large inventory of GM and Ford bonds and faced significant liquidity risk • Concurrently,co-movement in CDS across many different industries increased significantly • Quote imbalance in GM and Ford bonds, a measure of liquidity risk faced by market-makers, explains a significant portion of the excess CDSco-movement

  14. CDS Innovations % change in CDS CDS innovation • We employ the methodology in Acharya and Johnson (2005) to isolate the component of the CDS returns that is not attributed to default risk changes (as captured in equity prices) • This specification is estimated firm by firm 524 firms

  15. Our Hypothesis • Co-movement in CDS innovations increasedaround the downgrade • Test the hypothesis by examining the betas between CDS innovations • Crisis: 10 months around the May 2005 downgrade (Oct 2004 to July 2005) • Testing β2 > 0 is equivalent to testing co-movement increase around the downgrade

  16. Increase in co-movement of CDS innovations during crisis

  17. Sensitivity of CDS innovations for Consumer Services against GM in six sub-periods.

  18. Average GM and Ford Imbalance % in six sub-periods

  19. Three Key Steps • Around the downgrade, quotes in GM and Ford bonds by intermediaries became highly imbalanced,with more offers than bids • This evidence suggests that intermediaries held large inventory of GM and Ford bonds and faced significant liquidity risk • Concurrently,co-movement in CDS across many different industries increased significantly • Quote imbalance in GM and Ford bonds, a measure of liquidity risk faced by market-makers, explains a significant portion of the observed excess CDSco-movement

  20. Explaining CDS innovations with GM quote imbalance If Then If and Then we establish that covariance of CDS innovations (correlation risk) is positively related to variance in GM quote imbalance (liquidity risk)

  21. Separating the crisis and non-crisis effects • Allow the relationship between imbalance and innovation to differ between downgrade and non-downgrade periods controls for the general liquidity ofbonds of the same industry

  22. Regression of weekly CDS innovations on GM imbalance measures

  23. Explaining CDS innovations with GM quote imbalance If Then If and Then we establish that covariance of CDS innovations (correlation risk) is positively related to variance in GM quote imbalance (liquidity risk)

  24. Extensions • Principal components analysis • Non-downgrade period: 1st PC explains about 47% of the variation in CDS innovations and GM imbalance explains only 5% of this component • Downgrade period: 1st PC explains 71% of the variation in CDS innovations during the downgrade period and GM imbalance explains over 22% of this component • Examining the effect of the spread between financial CP and T-bill • The effect of GM imbalance on CDS co-movement was stronger in those periods when financial CP to T-bill rate widened • Controlling for the “risk appetite” of financial intermediaries (VIX) • Our liquidity risk measures are not simply a proxy for heightened risk aversion • Effect on investment grade versus sub-investment grade • Relationship between GM imbalance and CDS is stronger for sub-investment grade firms(though the effect is statistically weak)

  25. Alternative measures and Robustness • Alternative liquidity risk measures: • Short-selling fee of GM bonds and stocks • CDS-bond basis • Robustness: • Separately estimating crisis and non-crisis CDS innovations • Lagged daily imbalance measures • Measure the combined effect of contemporaneous and lagged imbalance • Alternative measure of CDS innovations (arithmetic differences in CDS spreads) • Replacing GM imbalance with imbalance of the Consumer Services industry • Using combined imbalance of GM and Ford bonds

  26. Conclusion • Studied in detail the effects of GM and Ford downgrade • Finding: around the downgrade, measures of liquidity risk faced by intermediaries explained a significant portion of excess CDS co-movement observed • Overall • supportive of models which imply that funding liquidity risk faced by financial intermediaries is a determinant of market prices during stress times

  27. Conclusion • Finally, the most recent credit turmoil has provided further evidence that the lack of funding liquidity of the financial sector can affect many markets simultaneously • Studying this recent crisis (once it has abated!) and tracing the impact of illiquidity in inter-bank and commercial paper markets on prices of assets in which banks are marginal price-setters is a promising topic for further research

  28. Thank you!

  29. Conclusion • First, it provides direct evidence as to whether fluctuations in prices in credit markets are unrelated to changes in equity markets, at least some of the times, and whether institutional frictions and liquidity effects are responsible for such segmentation. Our evidence suggests that the answer to this questions may be in the affirmative and this has the potential to shed light on the long-standing puzzle of why credit spreads are much wider than predicted by structural models of credit risk and exhibit a common unexplained factor across corporate bonds of different ratings and maturities (Collin-Dufresne, Goldstein and Martin, 2001, Schaefer and Strebulaev, 2005).

  30. Economic significance • (1) Liquidity risk measures explain CDS fees • - little during the non-downgrade period (R2 of 1% to 3%). • - substantially during the downgrade period (R2 of 15% to 20%). • (2) Economic magnitude is reasonably large: • - During the downgrade period, 1 sigma shock in liquidity riskproduces an effect of the order of 0.3 to 0.5 sigma in CDS innovations. • (3) Principal components (PC) analysisof CDS innovations reinforces this finding: • - Non-downgrade period: 1st PC explains 47% of the variation and GM imbalance explainsonly 5% of this component. • - Downgrade period: 1st PCexplains 71% of the variation during the downgrade period and GM imbalance explains over 22% of this component.

  31. other trade dislocations • The lack of any relationship between GM stock short-selling fee and excess co-movement of CDS innovations also helps rule out the alternative hypothesis that our results on CDS co-movement are due to dislocation in one popular trade of that period. This trade involved selling protection on GM (buying GM bonds, effectively) and shorting equity – experienced a dislocation due to increase in costs of short-selling GM stocks, which in turn

  32. other trade dislocations • The lack of any relationship between GM stock short-selling fee and excess co-movement of CDS innovations also helps rule out the alternative hypothesis that our results on CDS co-movement are due to dislocation in one popular trade of that period. • This trade involved selling protection on GM (buying GM bonds, effectively) and shorting equity – experienced a dislocation due to increase in costs of short-selling GM stocks, which in turn

  33. other trade dislocations • Another dislocation mentioned a lot in press and by practitioners around the downgrade episode was that between the (model-based) hedged positions in mezzanine and equity tranches of CDX index for North American Investment Grade (CDX.NA.IG). • These “correlation” trades were structured to hedge the shifts in underlying correlation, which would move the tranches in opposite directions, but the credit deterioration of GM and Ford created an increase in idiosyncratic default risk of GM and Ford, which were both parts of the CDX, causing the trade to experience severe dislocation in terms of its exposure to credit risk. • The dislocation supposedly triggered a substantial demand for CDS protection on GM and Ford. • Once again, it is unclear why this could affect CDS fees for all industries. • But, more importantly, our communication with practitioners and reading of their accounts suggests that the correlation trade dislocated after the downgrade, in fact, upon the announcement of Kerkorian bid for GM. In contrast, our strongest effect of CDS co-movement being linked to GM bond imbalance is observed during the preceding period from March 16th till May 4th.

  34. other trade dislocations • Another plausible view is that the CDS co-movement seen around the downgrade was induced by an increase in counter-party risk. • Large banks were adversely affected by the GM and Ford downgrade as a result of their increased inventory risk and unknown losses from their primary brokerage business (exposure to hedge funds that lost money on correlation-trade dislocation described above). • This is evidenced by the fact that CDS spreads of large banks increased sharply around the downgrade. • To test this hypothesis, we control for counter-party risk in our estimation of (4) by adding two new terms: the median CDS spread of large banks and its interaction with the Crisis dummy. The median CDS level of large banks and its interaction with the Crisis dummy should effectively control for the impact of counter-party risk in both crisis and non-crisis periods. The results (not reported) show that, compared to imbalance in GM bonds, bank’s CDS has little explanatory power over CDS innovations. The coefficients on Crisist*GMImbt remain significant for all but one industries.

  35. Conclusion • First, it provides direct evidence as to whether fluctuations in prices in credit markets are unrelated to changes in equity markets, at least some of the times, and whether institutional frictions and liquidity effects are responsible for such segmentation. Our evidence suggests that the answer to this questions may be in the affirmative and this has the potential to shed light on the long-standing puzzle of why credit spreads are much wider than predicted by structural models of credit risk and exhibit a common unexplained factor across corporate bonds of different ratings and maturities (Collin-Dufresne, Goldstein and Martin, 2001, Schaefer and Strebulaev, 2005).

  36. Conclusion • Second, our results suggest that “crowded-out” trades, where exogenous shocks would leave the intermediaries on one side of the market, may be especially vulnerable to liquidity-risk effects. Regulatory capital requirements on intermediaries, investment restrictions on investors, herding by mutual fund and hedge-fund managers on specific trading strategies, etc., while being outcomes of some deeper incentive problems, may contribute to inducing pervasive liquidity effects in response to shocks that are local to specific trades, securities and markets.

  37. Conclusion • Third, if market liquidity risk, funding liquidity risk, and correlation risk are all inter-twined, then there are important implications for risk managers of financial institutions and the hedging strategies they employ. For example, liquidity effects of the kind examined in this paper can cause fluctuations in correlations measured using statistical data and implied from extant models employed to value products such as CDOs, CLOs, and their tranches: Traditional covariance calculations or derivative-pricing models do not allow for such liquidity effects, and, hence, cannot isolate correlation risk due to fundamentals and that due to liquidity risk. The problem is akin to the one raised by Grossman (1988) and Grossman and Zhou (1996) in that just as option-pricing models based on frictionless market assumptions end up catching all effects of market frictions in the implied volatility parameter, current correlation models end up absorbing all liquidity effects in the implied correlation parameters.

  38. Liquidity Risk and Correlation Risk GM and Ford episode • Thesis: correlation riskobserved in the credit marketswas linked to liquidity riskofintermediaries • Sell-off of GM and Ford bonds => Intermediaries held a substantial inventory => reluctant to take on more credit risk • Intermediaries priced the constraint into prices of other credit risky instruments, inducingexcess co-movement

  39. Summary • Study documents : • large sell-off of GM and Ford bonds around the May 2005 downgrade, which generated significant liquidity risk for market-makers • coincidentally, there was excess co-movement in CDS of all industries • Results • measures of liquidity risk faced by intermediaries explains a significant portion of the CDS excess co-movement • Overall • supportive of models which imply that funding liquidity risk faced by financial intermediaries is a determinant of market prices during stress times

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