High-Grade Corporate Bond Market "Could Get Ugly" If Interest Rates Rise Fast

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Mark Melin
Published on
Updated on

When liquidity is most needed in the high-grade corporate bond market, it “could get ugly,” Bank of America Merrill Lynch predicts. While total volume has increased meaningfully since 2006, don’t let that fool you. The markets are not liquid, the analysts say, pointing to the Volcker Rule and central bank quantitative easing that has put investors reaching for yield on a ledge. [dalio] High-Grade Corporate Bond Market Market – Don’t conflate volume with liquidity High-grade corporate bond trading has nearly doubled in the decade following the global financial crisis, BofA’s Hans Mikkelsen and Yunyi Zhang observe. With annual volume at…

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Mark Melin is an alternative investment practitioner whose specialty is recognizing the impact of beta market environment on a technical trading strategy. A portfolio and industry consultant, wrote or edited three books including High Performance Managed Futures (Wiley 2010) and The Chicago Board of Trade’s Handbook of Futures and Options (McGraw-Hill 2008) and taught a course at Northwestern University's executive education program.