业务
私人信息检索
信用评级
信用增级
债券信用评级
资信证明
自然实验
信用记录
公开披露
会计
质量(理念)
财务
顺从(心理学)
精算学
公共信息
信用风险
公共关系
认识论
工程类
哲学
统计
机械工程
社会心理学
数学
政治学
心理学
作者
Steven Vanhaverbeke,Benjamin Balsmeier,Thorsten Doherr
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.jacceco.2024.101676
摘要
When firms are forced to publicly disclose financial information, credit rating agencies are generally expected to improve their risk assessments. Theory predicts such an information quality effect but also suggests an adverse reputational concerns effect since credit analysts may become increasingly concerned about alleged rating failures. We empirically examine these predictions using a large-scale quasi-natural experiment in Germany, where a new compliance regime required firms to disclose annual financial statements publicly. Consistent with the reputational concerns hypothesis, we find an average increase in credit rating downgrades that is entirely driven by changes in the discretionary assessments of credit analysts rather than changes in firm fundamentals. Following public disclosure regulations, analysts tend to give positive private information less weight in their risk assessments while assigning greater weight to negative public information. A final set of results indicates that professional credit providers recognize that the resulting downgrades are not warranted.
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