RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 The EU Ban on Uncovered Sovereign Credit Default Swaps: Assessing Impacts on Liquidity, Volatility, and Price Discovery JF The Journal of Derivatives FD Institutional Investor Journals SP 74 OP 98 DO 10.3905/jod.2016.23.4.074 VO 23 IS 4 A1 Paulo Pereira Silva A1 Carlos Vieira A1 Isabel Viegas Vieira YR 2016 UL https://pm-research.com/content/23/4/74.abstract AB During the recent financial crisis, regulatory authorities banned short positions in various financial markets in attempts to moderate pressure from what were felt to be unfavorable, unwarranted, and largely speculative, price changes. Suppression of undesirable price moves was extended to the realm of sovereign debt in November 2012, when the European Union prohibited “naked” purchases of credit default swaps (CDSs) on sovereign bonds. Buying CDS protection is deemed to be naked if the buyer is not doing so to protect an existing long position in the underlying bonds. Academic theory, and empirical evidence from similar bans on short sales in other markets, suggests that such interference in a competitive financial market generally doesn’t work very well: Market participants find ways around the rule; liquidity is reduced in the constrained market; information flow is degraded and prices can become biased because investors with unfavorable beliefs are eliminated from the market; and volatility may increase. Using a “diff-in-diffs” strategy of contrasting the effect on CDS spreads in the 28 affected countries with those in the 56 unconstrained countries as this regulation went into effect, Silva, Vieira, and Vieira show that credit-spread volatility was reduced by the ban, but liquidity was hurt as bid–ask spreads widened and open interest declined. They also find that price informativeness was reduced, in particular by lengthening the time it took for negative information to enter CDS spreads.TOPICS: Credit default swaps, financial crises and financial market history, developed