Corporate risk-taking with long-term, short-term and subordinate credit ratings
Dror Parnes
International Journal of Managerial Finance, 2021, vol. 18, issue 2, 398-423
Abstract:
Purpose - This study empirically examines, from the first quarter of 1981 until the fourth quarter of 2017, the relations across customary domestic issuer credit ratings (long-term, short-term and subordinate) and three popular corporate risk-taking measurements (the variability of operating profitability, net profitability, and research and development expenses). Design/methodology/approach - The author deploys categorical regressions and robustness tests with control variables, interaction terms, fixed effect variables, lag variables and delta variables. Findings - The author documents that both short-term and subordinate domestic credit ratings are key determinants of the volatility of operating profitability. The author also identifies long-term credit ratings as secondary factors, yet they do affect broader corporate risk-taking behavioral features (along all three measurements). Furthermore, the author finds that the higher (lower) the credit ratings assigned, i.e. the superior (inferior) the credit quality externally judged, the more (less) overall risk firms tend to undertake. Originality/value - It is the first research to examine both the inclusive influence and the granular effects of credit ratings on corporate risk-taking (CRT) behavior. It is also the only enquiry to inspect the specific relationships along three types of domestic issuer credit ratings: long-term, short-term and subordinate ratings.
Keywords: Corporate risk-taking; Long-term credit ratings; Short-term credit ratings; Subordinate ratings; Categorical regressions; G24; G31; G32 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2021
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:eme:ijmfpp:ijmf-02-2021-0118
DOI: 10.1108/IJMF-02-2021-0118
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