Home
Subscribe Latest Issue
Executive Editor: David Hirshleifer ♦ Editors: Geert Bekaert, Andrew Karolyi, Alexander Ljungqvist, Laura Starks, Pietro Veronesi, Michael Weisbach

Published Nov 2009 in volume 22, number 12 .

Macro Factors in Bond Risk Premia

  • Sydney C. Ludvigson (New York University and NBER)
  • Serena Ng (Columbia University)

Are there important cyclical fluctuations in bond market premiums and, if so, with what macroeconomic aggregates do these premiums vary? We use the methodology of dynamic factor analysis for large datasets to investigate possible empirical linkages between forecastable variation in excess bond returns and macroeconomic fundamentals. We find that "real" and "inflation" factors have important forecasting power for future excess returns on U.S. government bonds, above and beyond the predictive power contained in forward rates and yield spreads. This behavior is ruled out by commonly employed affine term structure models where the forecastability of bond returns and bond yields is completely summarized by the cross-section of yields or forward rates. An important implication of these findings is that the cyclical behavior of estimated risk premia in both returns and long-term yields depends importantly on whether the information in macroeconomic factors is included in forecasts of excess bond returns. Without the macro factors, risk premia appear virtually acyclical, whereas with the estimated factors risk premia have a marked countercyclical component, consistent with theories that imply investors must be compensated for risks associated with macroeconomic activity.

View full text | Download PDF



Other papers by Sydney C. Ludvigson


 

|   Contact   |