Theory predicts rating agencies' incentive conflicts to be stronger in boom periods, leading to biased ratings and a reduced level of rating quality. We investigate this prediction empirically based on three different approaches. First, we show that initial ratings disagree with bond spread levels during boom periods in the way that rating agencies hold a systematically more optimistic view. Second, we reveal that boom bond ratings tend to be more heavily downgraded from an ex post perspective; and, third, we demonstrate that boom ratings are inflated compared with conflicts-free benchmark ratings. In several robustness tests we show that the observed boom bias does not result from changes in credit-worthiness, adjustments in rating standards, competitive pressure, or market supply, but rather from rating agencies' incentive conflicts.
CITATION STYLE
Dilly, M., & Mählmann, T. (2016). Is There a Boom Bias in Agency Ratings? Review of Finance, 20(3), 979–1011. https://doi.org/10.1093/rof/rfv023
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