We analyze a rating agency's incentives to distort ratings in a model with a monopolistic profit maximizing rating agency, a continuum of heterogeneous firms, and a competitive market of risk-neutral investors. Firms sell bonds, the value of a firm's bond is known to the firm and observable by the agency, but not by buyers. Firms can choose to get a rating. The rating agency can reveal a signal of arbitrary precision about the quality of the bond. In contrast to the existing literature, we allow aggregate uncertainty. As in the existing literature, one rating class is optimal. However, the rating agency does not choose a socially optimal cutoff: the agency is more likely to be too lenient if the distribution of aggregate uncertainty has a l...
This paper presents a theoretical framework to describe the behaviour of the credit rating agencies(...
Nicolas Véron believes rating agencies have failed the marketplace in the run-up to the crisis, as t...
This paper studies the incentives of rating agencies to reveal the information that they obtain abou...
We analyze a rating agency's incentives to distort ratings in a model with a monopolistic profit max...
This paper develops a theoretical framework to shed light on variation in credit rating standards ov...
The failure of credit rating agencies to properly assess risks of complex financial securities was i...
Certifiers contribute to the sound functioning of markets by reducing asymmetric information. They, ...
This paper examines the role of credit rating agencies in the subprime crisis, which was at the outs...
Rating enables the information asymmetry existing in the issuer-investor relationship to be reduced,...
The paper asks if credit rating agencies have incentives to misrepresent their clients’ credit quali...
The first part of the paper describes how over time credit rating agencies ceased to play the role o...
Credit rating agencies have been under the spotlight since the beginning of the current financial cr...
This paper examines to what extent reputational concerns give rating agencies incentives to reveal i...
This paper examines the role of credit rating agencies in the subprime crisis that triggered the 200...
This paper examines the potential for conflicts of interest in the debt ratings business. Inherent i...
This paper presents a theoretical framework to describe the behaviour of the credit rating agencies(...
Nicolas Véron believes rating agencies have failed the marketplace in the run-up to the crisis, as t...
This paper studies the incentives of rating agencies to reveal the information that they obtain abou...
We analyze a rating agency's incentives to distort ratings in a model with a monopolistic profit max...
This paper develops a theoretical framework to shed light on variation in credit rating standards ov...
The failure of credit rating agencies to properly assess risks of complex financial securities was i...
Certifiers contribute to the sound functioning of markets by reducing asymmetric information. They, ...
This paper examines the role of credit rating agencies in the subprime crisis, which was at the outs...
Rating enables the information asymmetry existing in the issuer-investor relationship to be reduced,...
The paper asks if credit rating agencies have incentives to misrepresent their clients’ credit quali...
The first part of the paper describes how over time credit rating agencies ceased to play the role o...
Credit rating agencies have been under the spotlight since the beginning of the current financial cr...
This paper examines to what extent reputational concerns give rating agencies incentives to reveal i...
This paper examines the role of credit rating agencies in the subprime crisis that triggered the 200...
This paper examines the potential for conflicts of interest in the debt ratings business. Inherent i...
This paper presents a theoretical framework to describe the behaviour of the credit rating agencies(...
Nicolas Véron believes rating agencies have failed the marketplace in the run-up to the crisis, as t...
This paper studies the incentives of rating agencies to reveal the information that they obtain abou...