Volume 18, Issue 3 September 2022

De jure Benchmark Bonds

Abstract

As the most liquid of instruments, benchmark bonds play an important role in price discovery. Where markets fail to create them, however, can governments do so? In Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand, authorities have designated specific bonds as benchmarks. We measure these bonds' liquidity and find that they succeed as benchmarks about 55 percent of the time. In contrast to the experience of large advanced markets, our estimates suggest that choosing on-the-run issues as de jure benchmark bonds is a poor strategy. Instead, what leads to success in emerging markets is choosing seasoned bonds that already have a record of superior liquidity.

Authors

  • Eli Remolona
  • James Yetman

JEL codes

  • G10
  • G12
  • G14

Other papers in this issue

Claudio Borio and Piti Disyatat and Mikael Juselius and Phurichai Rungcharoenkitkul

Andrea Linarello and Andrea Petrella and Enrico Sette

Daniel Cooper and María José Luengo-Prado and Giovanni P. Olivei

Michele Ca' Zorzi and Adam Cap and Andrej Mijakovic and Michal Rubaszek

Jose M. Berrospide and Ralf R. Meisenzahl