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Accounting for credit losses under U.S. GAAP will soon transition from an incurred to an expected loss model. The new expected loss model was motivated by concerns that reporting only incurred losses does not provide investors with sufficient information about banks' true credit risk. In this...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012900884
This paper examines the asset pricing implication of loan loss provisions (LLP). LLP is a bank's dominant accrual and a key determinant of informativeness of banks' financial reports. We find banks with low LLP have significantly higher returns than banks with high-LLP. A long-short investment...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012890590
We test whether bank loans change public bond yields. A 10% increase in bank debt raises bond yields by 15bps, reflecting a trade-off between the benefits of bank cross-monitoring and higher bond risk. This effect is smaller for firms with no CDS and junk debt, where bank monitoring is most...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012851286
Accounting for credit losses under U.S. GAAP is transitioning from an incurred to an expected loss model. The model change was motivated by concerns that reporting only incurred losses does not provide investors with sufficient and timely information about banks’ credit risk. In this paper, I...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013222103
In this study, we use bank loan information to construct proxies for corporate transparency and examine whether these measures reflect information asymmetry in the stock market. Our analysis is based on a novel dataset of stock transactions and bank loans of all publicly listed firms on the...
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We examine how auditor reputation conditions the market valuation of banks' loan loss provision (LLP). The inherent uncertainty associated with and discretion permitted in estimating the LLP contributes to information asymmetry. The auditor's certification and monitoring roles influence firm...
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