- The AFS Conference will feature speakers, symposia, and several special sessions. Among them, we will introduce a new panel session for PhD students, highlighting how to best navigate the job market.
- With the generous support of our sponsors, the Academy has awarded several best paper awards during past meetings and we anticipate continuing Best Paper awards in 2021.
- We will continue with our Emerging Scholar Award to a current graduate student for promising research work on a paper or poster presented at the conference.
Credit Rating Changes and Debt Structure
Keywords
Credit watch, credit ratings, capital structure
Short Description
Through examination of the relationship between rating levels and subsequent annual net debt changes, Kisgen (2006) provides support for the Credit Rationing – Capital Structure (CR-CS) hypothesis which maintains that “+” or “-“ notch firms are more likely than non-notch firms to reduce net debt levels to increase the likelihood of a beneficial rating change. Through focusing on quarterly net debt changes over the two years before and after rating changes, we show that notch firms are generally not associated with lower net debt levels, greater net debt reductions, or higher probability of upgrades than non-notch firms before rating changes. Instead, notch firms with CreditWatch (CW) announcements are associated with relatively greater net debt level increases beginning three quarters before rating changes and these increases continue for firms both without and with CW announcements after the rating change. Further, analysis of upgrades-to-downgrades (UP/DOWN) at the time of rating change reveals that UP/DOWN is more a function of the presence of prior CW announcements than notch status. Firms without and with CW announcements exhibit UP/DOWN ratios of .8455 and .3628, respectively, with no significant differences in these ratios between notch and non-notch firms.
Lead & Corresponding Author
Joseph M. Goebel, PhD, Ball State University
Job Title
Associate Professor of Finance
Email Address
Additional Authors
Kristopher J. Kemper
Job Title
Associate Professor of Finance