Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
960645 | Journal of Financial Economics | 2006 | 30 Pages |
Abstract
Recent corporate debt offerings have included a covenant specifying a pre-determined payment to debtholders when the debt is downgraded. We examine the incentive for equityholders to increase firm risk (and the associated costs) when debt includes a “rating trigger.” Equityholders of firms with a low-risk profile and operating flexibility choose debt with a trigger, while equityholders of firms with a high-risk profile and less flexibility choose regular debt. A trigger that requires an equity infusion better mitigates conflicts between equityholders and debtholders than a trigger paid by liquidating assets. A trigger that increases the coupon rate is not optimal.
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Authors
Karan Bhanot, Antonio S. Mello,