The evolution and determinants of emerging markets credit spreads in the 1990s
BIS Working Papers
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No
68
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02 May 1999
This paper develops measures of emerging market credit spreads for the 1990s,
based on data on new bond issues and bank loans, that cover a broader range of
borrowers than the Brady bond spreads most commonly used to date. These
measures are used to identify the impacts of credit ratings, maturity and
currency denomination on spreads. We find important regional differences in
spreads across the developing world, even after controlling for risk and
maturity. We also identify the evolution of spreads during the 1990s up until
the advent of the Asian financial crisis, holding other determinants constant,
and find that emerging market spreads declined by more than can be explained by
improvements in risk. However, for emerging market instruments with relatively
favourable credit ratings, trends in spreads differed considerably from those
experienced by Brady bonds. Finally, and in contrast to much market commentary,
we find that variations in industrial country short-term interest rates explain
relatively little of the decline in emerging market bond spreads. Longer-term
trends, perhaps reflecting globalisation, along with the temporary impact of
the Mexican financial crisis, may have been more important factors in the
behaviour of emerging market spreads.