Book Description
This book reviews recent trends in the structure of OECD government securities markets and public debt management operations, and highlights the generic structural policy issues in emerging debt markets. Over the years, OECD debt managers have developed best practices for raising, managing, and retiring debt at the lowest possible price and acceptable risk, largely in the presence of persistent large deficits. New techniques have been developed to cope with the adverse consequences of running surpluses (pricing anomalies and lower liquidity in traditional benchmark markets). This report analyzes the impact of advanced electronic systems on primary and secondary markets. In the future, sophisticated electronic auction systems will enable institutional investors to bid directly in auctions, thereby bypassing primary dealers. Electronic trading systems will inevitably reshape secondary fixed-income markets. Underlying these challenges is the growing number of OECD sovereign issuers granting greater independence to debt management operations, accompanied by an increased emphasis on risk assessment and risk management. The report also addresses the introduction of new instruments (index-linked bonds and derivatives), as well as policies related to investor relations.
Debt Management and Government Securities Markets in the 21st Century SYNOPSIS
This book reviews recent trends in the structure of OECD government
securities markets and public debt management operations, and highlights the
generic structural policy issues in emerging debt markets.
Over the years, OECD debt managers have developed best practices for
raising, managing, and retiring debt at the lowest possible price and acceptable
risk, largely in the presence of persistent large deficits. New techniques have been developed to
cope with the adverse consequences of running surpluses (pricing anomalies and
lower liquidity in traditional benchmark markets).
This report analyzes the impact of advanced electronic systems on
primary and secondary markets. In the future, sophisticated electronic auction
systems will enable institutional investors to bid directly in auctions, thereby
bypassing primary dealers. Electronic trading systems will inevitably reshape
secondary fixed-income markets. Underlying these challenges is the growing
number of OECD sovereign issuers granting greater independence to debt
management operations, accompanied by an increased emphasis on risk assessment
and risk management.
The report also addresses the introduction of new instruments
(index-linked bonds and derivatives), as well as policies related to investor
relations.