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Covenant Prices of U.S. Corporate Bonds

The Review of Asset Pricing Studies 2026 open access
Abstract In this paper, we analyze the key drivers of bond covenant prices by employing a novel measurement approach based on secondary market data. We find that covenant prices vary significantly over time and are associated with market-wide credit risk, volatility, and macroeconomic variables. Apart from the time-series dynamics, there is also significant variation across bond and firm characteristics. In particular, covenant prices increase with the riskiness of bonds and are higher for firms that have more growth options, more tangible assets, and are smaller. Furthermore, we document a positive correlation between the prices of covenants and their subsequent inclusion rates.

Cross-Sectional Identification of Private Information

The Review of Asset Pricing Studies 2026 16(1), 1-49 open access
Abstract We propose a new private information measure based on a model of strategic trade optimization in the cross section of securities. Investors receive liquidity and private information shocks and optimize trading across securities, accounting for price impact (Kyle’s λ). The model yields a simple private information measure: λ×OIB (order imbalance). Intuitively, order imbalance is more likely to be information-driven when trading is expensive. We validate our measure by showing that it is greater for smaller firms with higher analyst dispersion, peaks with insider trades, helps explain return reversals, predicts return volatility, and increases before M&A announcements and after analyst coverage terminations. (JEL G11, G12, G14)

Short Selling Around News in International Stock Markets

The Review of Asset Pricing Studies 2026 16(1), 95-132 open access
Abstract This paper examines global sources of short sellers’ informational advantage by analyzing their trading around public news releases in 38 countries. I find that shorts on negative news have stronger predictive power than nonnews shorts, but only in countries with high-quality public information, more news per stock, and higher illiquidity. These results indicate that some country-level factors discourage short sellers from trading on public information. Short sellers’ informational advantage in most countries seems to arise from their access to private information, as evidenced by their ability to anticipate future negative news and their trading in unison with insiders. (JEL: G12, G14, G15)