The Corporate Spread Curve and Industrial Production in the United States

The term structure of domestic investment grade bond spreads - or corporate spread curve - contains useful information to predict future changes in industrial production, beyond the information already contained in interest rates, commercial paper-treasury bill spreads, and lagged values of industrial production. In fact, the corporate spread curve can explain the cumulative growth rate of industrial production over 3- to 48-month horizons, and the marginal growth rate over 6- to 18-month horizons. Unlike other financial variables, the corporate spread curve has been a stable predictor of real activity for the last fifteen years.
Publication date: January 2002
ISBN: 9781451842524
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Finance , Finance , Investment grade bonds , corporate spreads , term structure , real activity , GMM estimation , bonds , bond , random walk , corporate bond , Prices , Business Fluctuations , and Cycles: Forecasting and Simulation , Financial Markets and the Macroeconomy

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