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Commercial paper
(CP) is unsecured short-term promissory notes issued primarily by
corporations, although there are also
municipal and sovereign
issuers. It represents the largest segment of the money market. The vast
majority is issued as discount instruments
in
bearer form.
In the United States, terms
rarely exceed 270 days, since this exempts the paper from registration
under the
1933 Act. Terms may be as long as a year outside the United States,
but most commercial paper is issued for terms of about a month.
Yields are quoted on a
discount basis. Virtually all
countries use an actual/360 basis, but the United Kingdom uses an
actual/365 basis.
The market first developed in the United States during the
nineteenth century. America's industrial revolution was starting, and the
fractured, localized banking industry was ill-equipped to meet the
liquidity needs of emerging industrial corporations. If a textile mill was
unable to secure loans from local banks, it might raise the funds by
issuing promissory notes in New York, Boston or Philadelphia. Very likely,
the purchaser would be a bank in one of those financial centers, so
commercial paper was a vehicle for raising short-term funds out-of-state
in the absence of cross-state banking.
In the twentieth century, consumer finance companies
turned to commercial paper to finance their lending to purchasers of
automobiles, appliances and other consumer products. General Motors
Acceptance Corporation (GMAC) was a pioneer in such issuances. Today,
finance companies issue a significant proportion of commercial paper. They
also introduced asset-backed
commercial paper (ABC paper), which is securitized with loans or
other receivables held in a
special purpose
vehicle.
It wasn't until the 1980s that commercial paper was first
issued outside the United States, reflecting a global trend towards
disintermediation of banks.
Unlike bonds or other forms of long-term indebtedness, a
commercial paper issuance is not all brought to market at once. Instead,
an issuer will maintain an ongoing commercial paper program. It advertises
the rates at which it is willing to issue paper for various terms, so
buyers can purchase the paper whenever they have funds to invest. Programs
may be promoted by dealers, in which case the paper is called
dealer paper. Larger issuers, especially
finance companies, have the market presence to issue their paper directly
to investors. Their paper is called direct paper.
There is an inactive secondary market for commercial
paper, but dealers will make a market in paper they issue. Direct issuers
will generally honor requests to repay commercial paper early. Some do so
at principal plus accrued
interest, although this might invite abuse. Others credit interest
based on the rate the investor would have received if he had purchased the
paper with a term equal to his actual holding period.
Commercial paper entails
credit risk, and programs are
rated by the major rating agencies. Because commercial paper is a rolling
form of debt, with new issues generally funding the retirement of old
issues, the main risk is that the issuer will not be able to issue new
commercial paper. This is called rollover risk.
Many issuers obtain credit
enhancements for their programs. These may include a line of credit or
other alternative source of financing. Exhibit 1 summarizes the credit
ratings assigned to commercial paper by Moody's, Standard & Poor's and
Fitch.
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Moody's |
S&P |
Fitch |
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superior |
P1 |
A1+ or A1 |
F1+ or F1 |
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satisfactory |
P2 |
A2 |
F2 |
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adequate |
P3 |
A3 |
F3 |
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speculative |
NP |
B
or C |
F4 |
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defaulted |
NP |
D |
F5 |
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Credit ratings applied to commercial paper
by the major rating agencies. |
In the United States, commercial paper offers yields above
T-bills. This is due both to
their credit risk and the fact that interest from T-bills is not taxed at
the state and local level.
Every business day, the
Federal
Reserve reports the previous day's average rates on commercial paper
for several maturities and types of issuers. These
CP rates are a standard index used as an
underlier in various
interest rate swaps and
other derivatives.
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bankers acceptance
An acceptance that has a bank as its drawee.
basis swap
A floating-for-floating interest rate or currency swap.
certificate of deposit A money market instrument issued by a depository institution as
evidence of a time deposit.
COFI
Cost of Funds Index.
credit risk Risk due to
uncertainty in a counterparty's ability to meet its obligations.
discount instrument
A money market instrument that pays no coupons, matures for its face value, and
is issued at a discount to its face value.
discount
yield A formula for calculating yield on a discount instrument.
Fed funds Deposits
held by US banks in accounts at their regional Federal Reserve banks.
fixed income
term structure Refers collectively to a spot curve, forward curve,
discount curve, yield curve or any other curve that describes the time value of
money.
floater
A fixed income instrument whose coupon fluctuates with some designated reference
rate.
interest rate spreads
Spreads between interest rates.
interest
rate swap A swap under which both cash flow streams are in the same currency and are defined as cash flow streams that might be associated with some fixed income obligations.
Libor
London Interbank Offered Rate.
medium-term
note A debt security issued through shelf-registration under
US law.
repurchase
agreement An agreement to sell and
subsequently repurchase a security.
syndicated loan
A loan made collectively by a group of lenders to a single borrower.
Treasury bill US
Treasury security with with a maturity of a year or less at the time of issue.
United States financial regulation An overview. |
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Fabozzi, Mann and Choudhry (2002)
has detailed information on commercial paper and asset-backed
commercial paper.
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Ads by Contingency Analysis
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