22 research outputs found

    Corporate diversification and the cost of debt: the role of segment disclosures

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    Previous theoretical arguments suggest that industrial diversification provides a co-insurance effect that decreases the firm's default risk. In this paper, we endogenously estimate a firm's segment disclosure quality and investigate whether the quality of segment disclosures significantly affects bond investors' assessment of the coinsurance effect of diversification. We document that bonds issued by industrially diversified firms with high-quality segment disclosures have significantly lower yields than bonds issued by diversified firms with low-quality segment disclosures. We also find that the negative relation between industrial diversification and bond yields becomes stronger when firms improve segment disclosures as a result of FAS 131. Finally, we show that high-quality segment disclosures are associated with lower syndicated loan spreads for a subsample of loans issued by large bank syndicates, which are more likely to rely on publicly reported segment information

    Implied Bond Liquidity

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    Abstract We propose a new class of implied liquidity measures (ILMs) for bonds with limited transaction data by combining multiple approaches to measuring liquidity and datasets -heretofore only used separately. Generated by aggregating a bond's owners' liquidity preferences -revealed by the average liquidity of their bond holdings -ILMs are strongly robust. The high frequency of ILMs allows us to explicitly quantify a bond's systematic liquidity risk in the sense of Acharya and Pedersen (2005). We find liquidity risk to have a significant effect on bond spreads, incremental to that of liquidity level. Both effects dramatically increase during the current financial crisis

    Does it really pay to be green? Determinants and consequences of proactive environmental strategies

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    This study examines what factors affect firms' decisions to adopt a proactive environmental strategy and whether pursuing proactive environmental strategies leads to improved financial performance. Using longitudinal data from 1990 to 2003 for the four most polluting industries in the US (Pulp & Paper, Chemical, Oil & Gas, and Metals & Mining), this research empirically models the causal relations between firms' environmental performance and their financial resources and management capability. Our results show that positive (negative) changes in firms' financial resources in the prior periods are followed by significant improvements (declines) in firm's relative environmental performance in the subsequent periods. In addition, we also find that significant improvements (declines) in environmental performance in the prior periods can lead to improvements (declines) in financial performance in the subsequent periods after controlling for the impact of Granger causality. Finally, 3SLS analysis suggests that the positive association between environmental performance and financial performance is robust. Overall, our results are consistent with predictions of the resource-based view of the firm and indicate that although becoming "green" is associated with improvement in firm performance, such a strategy cannot be easily mimicked by all firms
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