Volume 74, Issue 2 p. 675-710
ARTICLE

An Explanation of Negative Swap Spreads: Demand for Duration from Underfunded Pension Plans

SVEN KLINGLER, SURESH SUNDARESAN,

SURESH SUNDARESAN

Klingler (corresponding author) is from the Department of Finance, BI Norwegian Business School. Sundaresan is from Columbia Business School. We are grateful to Stefan Nagel (the Editor), the Associate Editor, two anonymous referees, Darrell Duffie, Robin Greenwood, Wei Jiang, Tomas Kokholm, David Lando, Harry Mamaysky, Scott McDermott, Stephen Schaefer, Pedro Serrano, Morten Sørensen, Hyun Shin, Savitar Sundaresan, and Dimitri Vayanos for helpful comments. Klingler acknowledges support from the Center for Financial Frictions (FRIC), grant no. DNRF102. Sundaresan acknowledges with thanks the productive sabbatical spent at BIS, where the paper received useful suggestions and comments. We also thank participants in the seminars at the Swiss Finance Institute in Gerzensee and at the Indian School of Business for their comments. The authors have no conflicts of interest, as identified in the Disclosure Policy.

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First published: 13 December 2018
Citations: 20

ABSTRACT

The 30-year U.S. swap spreads have been negative since September 2008. We offer a novel explanation for this persistent anomaly. Through an illustrative model, we show that underfunded pension plans optimally use swaps for duration hedging. Combined with dealer banks' balance sheet constraints, this demand can drive swap spreads to become negative. Empirically, we construct a measure of the aggregate funding status of defined benefit pension plans and show that this measure helps explain 30-year swap spreads. We find a similar link between pension funds' underfunding and swap spreads for two other regions.

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