Title of article :
Does it matter who pays for bond ratings? Historical evidence
Author/Authors :
Jiang، نويسنده , , John (Xuefeng) and Harris Stanford، نويسنده , , Mary and Xie، نويسنده , , Yuan، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Abstract :
We test whether Standard and Poorʹs (S&P) assigns higher bond ratings after it switches from investor-pay to issuer-pay fees in 1974. Using Moodyʹs rating for the same bond as a benchmark, we find that when S&P charges investors and Moodyʹs charges issuers, S&Pʹs ratings are lower than Moodyʹs. Once S&P adopts issuer-pay, its ratings increase and no longer differ from Moodyʹs. More importantly, S&P only assigns higher ratings for bonds that are subject to greater conflicts of interest, measured by higher expected rating fees or lower credit quality. These findings suggest that the issuer-pay model leads to higher ratings.
Keywords :
Moodyיs , Investor pay , P , Issuer pay , Credit ratings , S&
Journal title :
Journal of Financial Economics
Journal title :
Journal of Financial Economics