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Understanding Safe Assets: Definition, Characteristics, and Importance, Resúmenes de Economía I

Risk ManagementFinancial MarketsEconomicsInvestment

An insightful analysis of safe assets, their definition, and the reasons for their importance in financial markets. The authors discuss the concept of safe assets, their different forms throughout history, and their role in the financial system. They also compare the safety features of u.s. Treasury securities, focusing on their convenience yield and the benefits they offer to investors. The document also touches upon the differences between public and private safe assets.

Qué aprenderás

  • What are the differences between public and private safe assets?
  • What are safe assets and why are they important in financial markets?
  • How do U.S. Treasury securities differ in terms of safety features and convenience yield?

Tipo: Resúmenes

2020/2021

Subido el 08/06/2022

Alex-Castro-Valera
Alex-Castro-Valera 🇵🇪

1 documento

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¡Descarga Understanding Safe Assets: Definition, Characteristics, and Importance y más Resúmenes en PDF de Economía I solo en Docsity! https://libertystreeteconomics.newyorkfed.org/2017/11/what-makes-a-safe-asset-safe.html Liberty Street Economics NOVEMBER 27, 2017 What Makes a Safe Asset Safe? Thomas M. Eisenbach and Sebastian Infante Over the last decade, the concept of “safe assets” has received increasing attention, from regulators and private market participants, as well as researchers. This attention has led to the uncovering of some important details and nuances of what makes an asset “safe” and why it matters. In this blog post, we provide a review of the different aspects of safe assets, discuss possible reasons why they may be beneficial for investors, and give concrete examples of what these assets are in practice. What Is a Safe Asset? In an idealized setting, a safe asset is easy to define. It is an asset that pays off a fixed amount with absolute certainty at some future date. In the parlance of economics, it means investing in the complete set of Arrow - Debreu securities . However, complications arise as soon as we consider this definition in more detail. Is there ever absolute certainty? Does the asset have to mature for the payoff to realize or can it be sold instead? Does the payoff have to be certain only at a particular date or over a whole time period? How far in the future is the certainty needed? Is the payoff amount fixed in real terms or in nominal terms? Consider, for example, U.S. Treasury securities, which are considered to have absolute safety of repayment, making them the prototypical “safe asset.” Among U.S. Treasuries, there are ones guaranteeing nominal repayment and ones indexed to inflation, thus guaranteeing repayment in real terms. Are the latter—Treasury inflation-protected securities (TIPS)—necessarily the “safer” assets? Perhaps not to an investor who may have to sell the assets before they mature and therefore considers the higher liquidity of nominal Treasuries an important aspect of safety. In addition, investors in either of these securities have to worry about the fact that future changes in interest rates make the prices of long-term Treasuries risky. Safe Assets in Practice In practice, safe assets are those with a very high likelihood of repayment, and are easy to value and trade. These assets play an important role in the financial system. Because of their safety they provide advantages above and beyond their risk-adjusted return. Examples are being a store of value, facilitating trade between counterparties, or being used as collateral to raise funding at a moment’s notice. Importantly, their high likelihood of repayment makes them immune to asymmetric information about their ultimate payoff, which allows investors to value them with a high degree of certainty and makes them easy to exchange for other assets or goods. Each of these features implies that investors are willing to forgo yield in order to reap the additional benefits safe assets provide. As a result, safe assets typically trade at a premium, known in the academic literature as a “convenience yield,” which reflects the nonpecuniary benefits investors receive for holding them. Throughout history, safe assets have taken on many different forms, from precious metal coins, to bills of exchange, and fairly recently to government debt (Gorton 2017). In today’s financial system, the prime example of a safe asset is U.S. Treasury securities. These securities are considered to have zero credit risk, can be easily sold, and can be used as collateral either to raise funding or to post as margin in derivatives positions. Treasuries are immune to information asymmetries about their ultimate payoff, making them particularly useful as a store of value and to facilitate trade. There is substantial empirical evidence that because of these valuable features, investors in Treasuries accept a lower yield on these assets. Krishnamurthy and Vissing-Jorgensen (2012) estimate that Treasuries’ safe asset status translates into an average yield reduction of 73 basis points. This yield spread can be interpreted as a measure of the convenience yield embedded in Treasuries. However, Treasuries differ significantly in maturity and that affects their safe asset characteristics. Treasury bills (T-bills) have the shortest maturities and are often thought of as “money-like” assets, that is, assets similar to physical currency. Because of this moneyness, yields on short-term T-bills are typically lower than those on comparable assets. We illustrate this difference in the next chart, comparing the yield on the four-week T-bill to the one-month overnight index swap (OIS) rate.
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