Abstract

The government bond (GB) has become the most attractive investment portfolio option, even though many macroeconomic factors affect the bond yield. This paper aims to investigate the determining factor of local currency government bond yield by considering the inflation rate, credit default swap, stock market index, exchange rate, and volatility index. This study used 240 data panel from the Bloomberg stock market in the form of data panel covering Southeast developing countries, namely Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, and the Philippines, for five years or sixty months from January 2015 to December 2019. Data analysis used recursive models and multivariate regression techniques using EViews software. The random effect model results revealed that change in the foreign exchange rate and volatility indexes affected, partially and simultaneously, the changes in the stock market index. The result also showed that changes in the stock market index, inflation rate, and credit default swap affected, partially and simultaneously, government bond yield changes. These results suggest that the government bond yield could be managed by controlling volatility index, foreign exchange rate, stock market index, inflation rates, and credit default swaps. This finding could provide an insight into the policymaker and fiscal authority on managing the risk of government bonds under control during high volatility or even making it reasonably lower. This result could contribute to the current research in the field of financial management. Acknowledgment It is the author’s pleasure to thank Muhammad Aulia SE MSc CSA® from the Ministry of Finance of Republic Indonesia, for his invaluable contribution to encourage this study and also to share the data required for this paper. He also delivers essential insights into improving the quality of this work. This research received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.

Highlights

  • For many years, government bonds (GB) have been widely considered the most attractive options for some emerging economies to finance their fiscal deficits due to expansive fiscal policy during nearzero interest rates

  • This study investigates the macroeconomic factors affecting government bond yield in Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, and the Philippines

  • The changes in foreign exchange have a very significant effect on changes in the stock market index with a negative correlation, meaning that an increase in the foreign exchange rate against the local currency will impact the decline in stock indexes

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Summary

Introduction

Government bonds (GB) have been widely considered the most attractive options for some emerging economies to finance their fiscal deficits due to expansive fiscal policy during nearzero interest rates This issue has coincided with massive liquidity flows from global funds, looking for higher yields from riskier assets, and has been part of “the fourth wave of debt accumulation” (Kose, Nagle, Ohnsorge, & Sugawara, 2020). This phenomenon, on the other hand, has created a rapid hike in the sovereign bonds to gross domestic product (GDP) ratio in several countries, including those countries in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) such as Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, and the Philippines (ASEAN-4).

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