Abstract

Around the apogee of the pandemic crisis in late March 2020, trading liquidity has evaporated out of high-yield (HY) bond markets across developing states. Concerned about this phenomenon, we assess emerging market (EM) debt liquidity as a combination of three metrics: (i) bid–ask spreads; (ii) relative liquidity score incorporating market depth, trading volumes, and time needed to liquidate an asset; and (iii) round-trip transaction costs—evidencing that all have worsened by the end of the first quarter of 2020. We complement our analysis by tracking the dynamics of the option-adjusted spreads of the EM HY bonds and document that the recovery trends of the credit and liquidity components in bonds spreads have decoupled in the aftermath of the Covid-triggered global meltdown. We evidence relevant differences in bond liquidity between chosen countries, representative of geopolitical regions. All the considered liquidity measures provide a coherent picture of the pandemic impact and allow for insights regarding the recovery from the crisis turmoil and the risk management of the EM HY bond portfolios throughout a systemic crisis.

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