Abstract: This paper develops and tests a recursive model of debt issuance and rating
migration. We examine a signaling game with firms who have private information
about their probability distribution of future rating migration. A key
assumption of the model is that rating agencies reveal information over time,
creating a recursive information problem, which in turn generates an adverse
selection problem in debt issuance similar to that for equity issuance in Myers
and Majluf (1984). This adverse selection model predicts that debt issuance
provides a negative signal of rating migration, and that the signal strengthens
with economic downturns. Another prediction regarding the maturity of debt
issuance is that long maturity debt sends a negative signal relative to short
maturity debt (Flannery 1986). Using data from 1980 to 1998 on straight bond
issuance and Moody's ratings, and controlling for firm and issue-specific
factors, we find that debt issuance sends a negative signal of a firm's default
probability, and that this signal intensifies with a decline in economic
activity and with an increase in debt maturity.
Keywords: Debt Issuance, rating migrations
Full paper (108 KB PDF)
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Last update: March 10, 2000
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