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Sovereign spreads in the euro area. Which Prospects for a Eurobond? Carlo A. Favero, A. Missale

Sovereign spreads in the euro area. Which Prospects for a Eurobond? Carlo A. Favero, A. Missale QFIN Colloquia April 2011. The Relevant Stylized Facts. Assess the degree of integration in the European government bond market by examining the behavior of interest rate differentials.

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Sovereign spreads in the euro area. Which Prospects for a Eurobond? Carlo A. Favero, A. Missale

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  1. Sovereign spreads in the euro area. Which Prospects for a Eurobond? Carlo A. Favero, A. Missale QFIN Colloquia April 2011

  2. The Relevant Stylized Facts • Assess the degree of integration in the European government bond market by examining the behavior of interest rate differentials. • Examine the potential for a larger European market to better compete with the US market, by considering the liquidity premium on German relative to US bonds. • Look at the interest rate on bonds issued by the European Investment Bank (EIB) to evaluate the performance of a bond issued by an EU Institution.

  3. Dynamics of 10-years bond yields Source: Datastream

  4. Spread of 10-years government bond yields vs Bund • After only one year from the introduction of the European Monetary Union (EMU) in 1998 the market for fixed-income government securities was taking the form of an almost perfectly integrated market • The spreads between high yield Member States (Portugal, Italy, Spain) moved from the high peak of 300 basis points in the pre-EMU to less than 30 basis points of post-EURO • The differentials among different national bonds remained low, although not negligible, for almost ten years • With the burst of the subprime financial and the euro debt crisis the differential become sizable

  5. Credit and Liquidity Risks and Expectations of Exchange Rate Depreciation • Interest rates of government bonds (same maturity and currency) may differ because of different credit and liquidity risks and expectations of exchange rate depreciation • Credit risk depends on the probability that an issuer may not honour its obligations (default risk premia). This is related to fiscal fundamentals of each country (deficit and debt) and to GDP growth rates, but also to external factors (global risks, “flight to quality” effects) • Liquidity risk depends on the total amount of volumes traded in the market, transaction costs and market efficiency • Expectations of exchange rate depreciation were the main components of spreads in the pre-euro era. They have disappeared in the first decade of the second millenium and they are currently dominated by Credit risk concerns

  6. Spread of 10-years government bond yields vs Bund • It is possible to identify the credit risk premium form the liquidity premium by using the Credit Default Swaps (CDS) as a proxy of the credit risk premium • The difference between a CDS on a MS bond and the CDS on the German Bund (the same maturity) is a measure of the credit risk premium of the State relative to Germany • The Evidence from the data tells us that • There is a clear tendency of all spreads on Bunds in the euro-area to co-move but, importantly, the nature of the comovement is not constant over time • The non-default component of the interest-rate spread is very small for all Member States with only few exceptions: Finland, France and, perhaps, the Netherlands. in a global crisis the liquidity premium rises to determine a positive comovement between the Finnish spread and all other euro-area spreads. • For all countries non-default components are much more likely to reflect liquidity risk rather than expectations of depreciation of the exchange rates.

  7. Default & non-Default components in Europe Source: Datastream

  8. Default & non-Default components in Europe Source: Datastream

  9. Contagion

  10. Credit & Liquidity risk in Europe Source: Bloomberg

  11. The Econometric Evidence

  12. The Econometric Evidence

  13. Market Size Source: BIS

  14. Market Size Source: Datastream

  15. EIB Bonds Source: Datastream

  16. The different proposals for a eurobond • The proposals may be divide into three general schemes • A commonly issued Eurobond with country-specific shares backed by several guarantees(type 1) (Proposed by or consistent with: EPDA, 2008 and De Grawve and Moesen, 2009) • . • A commonly issued Eurobond backed by joint guarantees (type 2) (Proposed by or consistent with: Giovannini Group, 2000; Boonstra, 2010; Depla, 2010; and Jones, 2010) • An EU Eurobond issued by an EU Institution(type 3) (Proposed by or consistent with: Giovannini Group, 2000; issued by the EIB for funding projects of the Lisbon Agenda, Majocchi, 2005; and issued by the EIB for the purpose of financing a European Financial Stability Fund, Gros and Micossi, 2009, Stuart Holland, 2010)

  17. Proposals in brief

  18. Pros • The efficiency gains from a unified market could be substantial. Greater coordination and market integration, especially on the supply side, may reduce liquidity premium, and thus, the cost of borrowing for Member States. Moreover, a portfolio shift by international investors towards safety and liquidity, i.e. a flight to quality, may affect both the credit risk premium and the liquidity premium. • A large common market of Government bonds will most probably satisfy the global demand for risk-free assets and better compete with US Treasuries. This is known as the “safe haven” argument. Also, a single debt instrument would also strengthen the use of the euro as international reserve currency. • But even more than liquidity it is credit risk which will allow Eurobond to achieve the status of a “save haven” international benchmark. Its credit standing should be as high as that of German Bunds. Evidence from the global financial crisis is consistent with a flight to credit quality more than liquidity. Much depends then on the types of guarantees and /or credit standings of participating members. • EIB bonds are priced by international investors in the same way as safe but illiquid Finnish bonds; indeed the interest rate differential between the two bonds is practically zero. This suggests that a Eurobond issued by an EU institution (and probably all euro-area MS) would be perceived as the highest credit quality and could reach the “safe haven” status if its market size approached that of US Treasuries.

  19. Cons • Commitment to permanent issuance program will be crucial • To create a thick market, Eurobond issues would have to be sufficiently large, regular and predictable, i.e. based on an issuing calendar specifying minimum offered amounts. More importantly , issuance should not be discontinued. This may prove to be difficult to the extent that the transition process will involve high initial set-up costs and uncertain benefits in the future. • Centralized funding would raise coordination issues and would have to be accommodated on national bond markets. This could add complexity to the management of each MS’s total debt and run against full market integration. • A Eurobond underpinned by joint guarantees allows for a greater flexibility in accommodating debt management. In all cases, joint issuance would require high degree of coordination: amounts, maturity and timing of bond issues would have to be decided by the issuing entity in close operation with MS.

  20. Cons • The most forceful argument against a common European bond is that it undermines fiscal discipline by removing incentives for sound budgetary policies. At worst, it could create a moral hazard problem in that a Member State may be tempted to free ride on other Members’ legal obligations to assume its debt in case of default. In particular, a common Eurobond prevents financial markets from exerting their disciplinary effects through higher interest rates and undermines the no bailout clause that prohibits a Member State to be liable for or assume the debt obligations of another government. Then, with lower costs of default and deficit financing, Member States would be encouraged to run lax fiscal policies and take up more debt. This would weaken the credibility of the euro-zone as an area of stability and fiscal soundness. • In the end the problem of moral hazard created by the mutualisation of risks would always emerge, as it is inherent in any insurance contract. The important question to ask is whether a common Eurobond can reduce exposure to crisis transmission and whether this benefit can compensate for the risk of moral hazard.

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