Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1893/35260
Appears in Collections:Accounting and Finance Journal Articles
Peer Review Status: Refereed
Title: Using Interest Rates to Predict Economic Growth: Are Corporate Bonds Better?
Author(s): McMillan, David
Contact Email: david.mcmillan@stir.ac.uk
Keywords: Term Structure
Default Yield
GDP Growth
Consumption
Investment
Date Deposited: 11-Jul-2023
Citation: McMillan D (2023) Using Interest Rates to Predict Economic Growth: Are Corporate Bonds Better?. <i>International Journal of Finance and Economics</i>.
Abstract: We consider whether government bonds, through the term structure, or corporate bonds, through the default yield, provide predictive power for output, consumption and investment growth in the US. Such predictive power will allow policy-makers to use the information as a leading indicator for macroeconomic performance and will improve our understanding of the links between real and financial markets. Full sample results suggest that both interest rate series exhibit predictive power for each of the macroeconomic growth series. Time-variation in the predictive coefficient reveals the waning influence of the term structure and the rising influence of the default yield. Forecast results, which are obtained from a rolling window approach, likewise suggest both series have information content for macroeconomic conditions, but there is a change in their relative strengths. These results may arise as interest rates have declined since the highs of the early to mid-1980s thus reducing the information content of government yields, whereas corporate bonds respond more to investor views of macroeconomic risk, which affects a firm’s ability to repay its debt. Furthermore, short-term rates are largely held unprecedently low since the dotcom crash.
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Notes: Output Status: Forthcoming

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