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Explicit Corporate Bond Spreads

For a capital market simulation of the explicit corporate yield curve type, the parameters of this topic define the “spreads” over government (spot) yields used to calculate short term (1 year) and long term (30 year) corporate bond yields, essentially by adding these “spreads” to the annual real rates of return generated for government bonds according to the parameters of the Real Rate & Term Premium topic. Thus government yields are generated first, then the spreads are calculated and corporate spot yields are set equal to the government spot yields plus the appropriate spread. Thirty year corporate bond yields are calculated from the corporate spot yields, assuming semi-annual coupon payments.

In practice, the long term corporate spread is calculated first, for each year of the simulation period, and its value is then used to calculate the short term corporate spread. In these calculations, the credit spread is assumed to be lognormally distributed (constrained to ten standard deviations above the mean).

The Short term spread, or short term credit spread, is the excess of the 1 year corporate spot rate (or return rate) over the 1 year government spot rate (or return rate). The parameters of this section are as follows:

The Long term spread, or long term credit spread, is the excess of the 30 year corporate spot rate over the 30 year government spot rate. The parameters of this section are as follows:

The final parameter is the Short spread correlation with long spread, which indicates the relationship between the expected short term, or 1 year, credit spread and the expected long term, or 30 year, credit spread. This value is expected to be between 0 and 1, where 0 indicates no relationship.