Although it is a highly desirable feature for securities markets in
order to thrive, sufficient liquidity is barely recognized when being
present. This study analyzes often neglected market liquidity in the
corporate bond market after the introduction of comprehensive financial
regulation in the USA, foremost associated with the Volcker Rule.
Research identifies an increasing share of customer liquidity provision
to be a reason for an underestimation of overall transaction costs, as
spreads charged by customers are lower compared to market-makers'
spreads. With customers providing liquidity where market-makers do not,
the overall spread averages decrease. The author applies this research
results to collateralized loan obligations (CLOs) and the corporate bond
market. This approach is new, since it directly tests the growth of
liquidity provision by CLOs as non-Volcker affected vehicles replacing
restricted market-makers.