Summary
As stability has begun to return to the Asia-Pacific region, so do international investors' appetites for high-yielding Asian securities. Right now, due to the substantial bank debt accrued during the last financial crisis there, the liveliest investment areas in the Asian-Pacific region are fixed income instruments. Authors Jonathan A. Batten and Thomas A. Fetherston provide country-by-country analyses, including highly-focused descriptions of the history, current disposition, and future prospects of each country's bond markets, along with detailed explanations of the market structure and conventions in each. Jonathan Batten is a Professor of Finance at Deakin University. His professional experience includes senior posts at the Australian Industry Development Corporation, The Bank of Tokyo, Credit Lyonnais and IBM Consulting in their Asia-Pacific Banking and Finance Group.
Author Biography
Jonathan Batten is Professor of Finance at Deakin University. His professional experience includes senior posts at the Australian Industry Development Corporation, The Bank of Tokyo, Credit Lyonnais, IBM Consulting, and Asia-Pacific Banking and Finance Group. <p> A. Fetherston is Professor of Finance at the University of Alabama Birmingham. He is editor of the journal International Review of Financial Analysis and research book series Research in International Business and Finance.
Table of Contents
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1. A Perspective on Asia-Pacific Bond Markets. |
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5a. The Rating Process in India. |
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6a. Long-Term Equilibrium in High-Grade Yen Bond Markets. |
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8a. Issues When Building Benchmark Yield Curves: Evidence from Malaysia. |
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13a. The Rating Process in Thailand. |
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13b. What Factors Affect the Credit Spreads on Emerging Market Issuers? Evidence from Thailand |
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