Année
2026
Auteurs
VRANCEANU Radu, BOUSSELMI Wael, PEIA Oana
Abstract
Sovereign bond market crises are usually driven by a combination of deteriorating fundamentals and self-fulfilling beliefs. However, it is difficult to empirically disentangle the contribution of these two factors in explaining government bond yields during episodes of sovereign debt distress. In this paper, we address this challenge through a controlled laboratory experiment. In the experiment, a government issues one-period bonds through a discriminatory price auction to finance a legacy of government debt. In a baseline treatment, sovereign default can result from investors’ failure to coordinate in purchasing bonds (rollover risk) or the government debt reaching a solvency limit (fundamental risk). In a second treatment, a central bank intervenes as a bondholder-of-last-resort and eliminates rollover defaults. We find that investors correctly price the probability of government default and demand higher interest rates as the risk of default increases. At the same time, the required risk premium is lower in the treatment with a central bank compared to the baseline treatment. The difference between interest rates across the two treatments can be viewed as the rollover component of sovereign debt risk.
BOUSSELMI, W., PEIA, O. et VRANCEANU, R. (2026). Rollover and insolvency risk in sovereign debt pricing: An experimental study. Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, 185, pp. 105295.