The Credit market is also known as the ‘Debt Market’ because the credit market includes various forms of debt. The Credit market is also referred to as the ‘bond market’, as the bond market also characterizes the dominant portion of the credit market.
The credit market can be mainly classified into two categories – the Government Securities Market and the Corporate Bonds market.
The Government Securities like treasury bills and bonds or dated securities are issued by the Government. The Government securities are safe investments with no risk or low risk by default. These securities can be traded in the secondary market.
An investor who buys a corporate bond is effectively lending money to the company in return for periodical interest payments. These bonds can be traded in the secondary market. Corporate bonds offer higher coupons of interest but they are riskier by default.
The credit market also includes various forms of debt offerings, like securitized obligations and notes, which include credit default swaps (CDS), mortgage-backed securities, and collateralized debt obligations (CDOs).
Securitized debt instruments are loan obligations that have been packaged and sold as securities. These are usually bundled together with other debt instruments that have similar credit ratings, reducing the buyer’s risk exposure should any one of those debts default. The collateralized debt obligation (CDO) is offered to institutional investors in tranches or discrete classes based on the credit risk attached to every CDO. The process moves the loans’ risk of default from the bank to the investors. A credit default swap (CDS) is a financial swap agreement under which the seller of the CDS will compensate the buyer in the event of a debt default or other credit event.
The credit market is interconnected with several internal and external factors such as;
In addition to the above, the credit quality of the debt instruments issued by the corporates, Global economic conditions, crude oil prices, volatility in foreign exchange rates, etc., impact the health of the credit market.
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3. INTERCONNECTEDNESS OF THE MONEY MARKET
4. INTERCONNECTEDNESS OF THE CAPITAL MARKET
5. THE INTERCONNECTEDNESS OF FINANCIAL MARKETS
6. INTERCONNECTEDNESS OF THE FOREX MARKET
Learn more on bonds
To learn more about different kinds of bonds
Read:
1. WHAT IS A ZERO-COUPON BOND?
2. WHAT ARE FOREIGN BONDS, EURO BONDS, AND GLOBAL BONDS?
3. WHAT IS INFLATION INDEXED BONDS OR IIB?
4. WHAT IS YIELD OR YIELD TO MATURITY (YTM) OF BONDS?
5. CONVERTIBLE BONDS, FLOATING RATE BONDS AND NEGATIVE BONDS
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