Sovereign Bonds since Waterloo

This paper studies external sovereign bonds as an asset class. It compiles a new database of 266,000 monthly prices of foreign-currency government bonds traded in London and New York between 1815 (the Battle of Waterloo) and 2016, covering up to 91 countries. The main insight is that, as in equity markets, the returns on external sovereign bonds have been sufficiently high to compensate for risk. Real ex-post returns average more than 6 percent annually across two centuries, including default episodes, major wars, and global crises. This represents an excess return of 3–4 percent above US or UK government bonds, which is comparable to stocks and outperforms corporate bonds. Central to this finding are the high average coupons offered on external sovereign bonds. The observed returns are hard to reconcile with canonical theoretical models and the degree of credit risk in this market, as measured by historical default and recovery rates. Based on an archive of more than 300 sovereign debt restructurings since 1815, the authors show that full repudiation is rare; the median creditor loss (haircut) is below 50 percent.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Meyer, Josefin, Reinhart, Carmen M., Trebesch, Christoph
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2022-01
Subjects:SOVEREIGN BOND, EMERGING MARKET BOND, HIGHLY-INDEBTED POOR COUNTRIES, DEBT, SOVEREIGN DEBT, EMERGING MARKET ECONOMIES, DEBT MARKET,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/243451642707009657/Sovereign-Bonds-since-Waterloo
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36877
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