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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 June 2023
We study the effect of credit default swaps (CDSs) on the bond market. Using a comprehensive sample of U.S. corporate bonds, we document that the presence of CDSs significantly increases bond liquidity and reduces yield spreads for investment grade bonds. We show that CDSs influence the bond market by lowering the impact of fire sales of institutional bondholders and facilitating inventory management for bond dealers who absorb fire sale shocks. However, the liquidity provision role of CDSs gets weakened after the CDS Big Bang in 2009, potentially because of the requirement of large upfront payments.
We thank Joshua Coval, Madhu Kalimipalli, Martin Oehmke, Wenlan Qian, and conference participants at the Western Finance Association 2013 Meeting, the 2013 Singapore Scholars Symposium, and the 2014 SAIF-Moody Credit Market Meeting for their helpful comments and discussions. We thank Hendrik Bessembinder (the editor) and William Maxwell (the referee) for their comments that significantly improved the paper. All remaining errors and omissions are our own.