4.6 Article

Institutional investment horizons, corporate governance, and credit ratings: International evidence

Journal

JOURNAL OF CORPORATE FINANCE
Volume 67, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcorpfin.2020.101874

Keywords

Institutional ownership; Investment horizons; Corporate governance; Credit ratings

Funding

  1. Canada's Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council

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The study finds that firms with higher long-term institutional ownership tend to have higher credit ratings, especially during times of higher expropriation risk, for firms with weaker internal corporate governance, and in countries with lower-quality institutional environments. This suggests that long-term investors improve a firm's credit risk profile through effective monitoring, facilitating access to debt markets for firms facing severe agency problems.
Using a comprehensive set of firms from 57 countries over the 2000-2016 period, we examine the relation between institutional investor horizons and firm-level credit ratings. Controlling for firm-and country-specific factors, as well as for firm fixed effects, we find that larger long-term (short-term) institutional ownership is associated with higher (lower) credit ratings. This finding is robust to sample composition, alternative estimation methods, and endogeneity concerns. Long-term institutional ownership affects ratings more during times of higher expropriation risk, for firms with weaker internal corporate governance, and for those in countries with lower-quality institutional environments. Additional analysis shows that long-term investors facilitate access to debt markets for firms facing severe agency problems. These findings suggest that, unlike their short-term counterparts, long-term investors improve a firm's credit risk profile through effective monitoring.

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