Non-Sovereign, Quasi-Government, and Supranational Agency Debt

Government Agencies Government agencies are quasi-government entities that issue debt in order to fund the government-sponsored provision of specific public goods or services based on sovereign or local law. Local and Regional Government Authorities Non-sovereign government authorities may either issue debt for general purposes, which is repaid from local tax cash flows, or issue debt…

Sovereign Debt

National or sovereign government issuers are distinguished by their legal authority to establish and maintain a country’s public goods and services and their ability to tax economic activity in their jurisdiction. Additional sources of repayment for their debt obligations include tariffs, usage fees, and cash flows from government-owned enterprises. The size and scope of public…

Long-Term Corporate Debt

Similarities between Long-Term Investment-Grade and High-Yield Issuance Both issuers and investors considering (non-callable) long-term debt of different maturities weigh the relative risk associated with a maturity choice against its costs or yield-to-maturity. Under normal market conditions, longer maturities are associated with both higher interest rates (yields-to-maturity on government bonds) and higher credit spreads for a…

Repurchase Agreements

An important source of secured short-term lending and borrowing is the repurchase agreement (repo) market. A repurchase agreement, or repo, involves the sale of a security with a simultaneous agreement by the seller to buy the same (or a similar) security back from the purchaser at an agreed-on repurchase price and future date called the repurchase date. In…

Short-Term Funding Alternatives

Both non-financial corporations and financial institutions rely on borrowed capital to support their short-term activities.  External Loan Financing Non-financial corporations often rely on financial intermediaries for short-term financing. Common instruments include Lines of Credit Uncommitted lines of credit are the least reliable form of bank borrowing for a company, as the name suggests. A bank…

Fixed-Income Indexes

Fixed-income indexes perform a similar function in bond markets as equity indexes in stock markets but differ in three important ways from their equity counterparts. If a bond fund aims to match the returns of a specific index, it will typically hold a representative sample of constituent securities in order to match index returns because…