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How Do Global Credit RatingAgencies Rate Firms from Developing Countries?

dc.contributor.authorLi-Gang Liu
dc.contributor.authorGiovanni Ferri
dc.date.accessioned2015-04-29T14:29:14Z
dc.date.available2015-04-29T14:29:14Z
dc.date.issued2001-09-15
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11540/4131
dc.description.abstractWhat is the relative contribution of sovereign risks and firm-level credit risks in a firm’srating assignment? Or, stated otherwise, what is the information content of these components in afirm’s rating? This paper intends to examine this issue, which has not been adequately addressed so far,using a tailor-made firm-level database, matching sovereign and firm ratings with firm performanceindicators reportedly used by rating agencies. The paper decomposes factors contributing to a firm’scredit rating by measuring each factor’s relative weight. By matching a firm’s credit risk indicatorswith its corresponding sovereign risk, we are able to disentangle the relative importance of each factorin a firm’s rating assignment.We make three contributions. First, our findings reveal that sovereign risks contribute to amajor part of firms’ ratings in developing countries, whereas such risks play a negligible role inassigning firms’ ratings in developed countries. Second, we show that this result for developingcountries partly depends on the “country ceiling effect”—private ratings are bound upwards by theirsovereign rating—but in these countries idiosyncratic information is irrelevant even for firms whoserating would lie anyhow way below their sovereign. Accordingly, we document that the informationcontent of firm ratings is much smaller in developing countries than in developed countries. Third, weshow that cross-country indicators of information quality, rule of law and other institutional qualityindicators help explain this unsatisfactory situation but do not solve the puzzle entirely. Global ratingagencies need also to improve their rating methodology to meet the challenges of the emerging marketratings.
dc.languageEnglish
dc.publisherAsian Development Bank Institute
dc.rightsCC BY 3.0 IGO
dc.rights.urihttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/
dc.titleHow Do Global Credit RatingAgencies Rate Firms from Developing Countries?
dc.typeWorking Papers
dc.subject.expertCofinancing
dc.subject.expertDevelopment Financing
dc.subject.expertEconomic Development and Finance
dc.subject.expertFinance
dc.subject.expertFinancial Advisory Services
dc.subject.expertFinancial Assistance
dc.subject.expertFinancial Support
dc.subject.adbADB
dc.subject.adbSelf Financing
dc.subject.adbAid Financing
dc.subject.adbFinancial Aid
dc.subject.adbDevelopment Banks
dc.subject.adbProject Impact
dc.subject.naturalDevelopment Banks
dc.subject.naturalAsset allocation
dc.subject.naturalInvestment management
dc.subject.naturalCommercial documents
dc.title.seriesResearch Paper Series
dc.title.volume26
dc.contributor.imprintAsian Development Bank
oar.themeFinance
oar.adminregionAsia and the Pacific Region
oar.countryBangladesh
oar.countryBhutan
oar.countryIndia
oar.countryMaldives
oar.countryNepal
oar.countrySri Lanka
oar.countryBrunei Darussalam
oar.countryCambodia
oar.countryIndonesia
oar.countryLao People's Democratic
oar.countryMalaysia
oar.countryMyanmar
oar.countryPhilippines
oar.countrySingapore
oar.countryThailand
oar.countryViet Nam
oar.countryCook Islands
oar.countryFiji Islands
oar.countryKiribati
oar.countryMarshall Islands
oar.countryFederated States of Micronesia
oar.countryNauru
oar.countryPalau
oar.countryPapua New Guinea
oar.countrySamoa
oar.countrySolomon Islands
oar.countryTimor-Leste
oar.countryTonga
oar.countryTuvalu
oar.countryVanuatu
oar.countryAfghanistan
oar.countryArmenia
oar.countryAzerbaijan
oar.countryGeorgia
oar.countryKazakhstan
oar.countryKyrgyz Republic
oar.countryPakistan
oar.countryTajikistan
oar.countryTurkmenistan
oar.countryUzbekistan
oar.countryPeople's Republic of China
oar.countryHong Kong
oar.countryChina
oar.countryRepublic of Korea
oar.countryMongolia
oar.countryTaipei,China
oar.identifierOAR-004676
oar.authorLiu, Li-Gang
oar.authorFerri, Giovanni
oar.importtrue
oar.googlescholar.linkpresenttrue


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  • ADBI Research Paper Series
    The Asian Development Bank Institute (ADBI) research paper series disseminate selected work in progress to facilitate an exchange of ideas within academic and policy communities. An objective of the series is to circulate primary findings promptly, regardless of the degree of finish. ADBI’s activities are guided by its three strategic priority themes of inclusive and sustainable growth, regional cooperation and integration, and governance for policies and institutions.

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