Third-party underwriting and its effects on credit spreads and earnings management: Evidence from China’s financial bond market
China Finance Review International
ISSN: 2044-1398
Article publication date: 1 March 2019
Issue publication date: 22 January 2020
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to examine the certification and monitoring motivations of third-party underwriting and its effects on credit spreads and earnings management of bank issuers.
Design/methodology/approach
Ordinary least squares is used to examine the certification and monitoring effects of third-party underwriting. Furthermore, the Heckman two-stage estimation method is used in controlling the endogeneity of sample selection.
Findings
The authors find that financial bonds underwritten by third-party underwriters bear lower credit spreads due to their credibly ex ante certification and effectively ex post monitoring compared with self-underwriting. Moreover, the certification of third-party underwriters can help to select good quality bond issuers with lower earnings management, and the monitoring function also plays an essential role in constraining the behavior of earnings management after the bond issues.
Research limitations/implications
The findings in this study suggest that underwriting types (third-party underwriting) will affect financial bond yields and bank issuers’ earnings management.
Practical implications
On the one hand, the authors should encourage third-party underwriters to actively promote the certification and monitoring functions. For example, given commercial banks the chance to be underwriters when the bond issuers are investment banks, which is not allowed now in China’s financial bond market. On the other hand, the authors should cut off the quid pro quo relations within third-party underwriting because such relations will reduce the certification and monitoring effects of third-party underwriters.
Originality/value
This is the first study to distinguish the certification and monitoring effects by using unique data from China’s financial bond market. And the authors further investigate the adverse effects of quid pro quo relations (hiring each other as lead underwriters) on the certification and monitoring effects of third-party underwriters.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by the Shanghai Planning Office of Philosophy and Social Science (2016EGL003) and Natural Science Foundation of China (71702096).
Citation
Lyu, H. and Yang, C. (2020), "Third-party underwriting and its effects on credit spreads and earnings management: Evidence from China’s financial bond market", China Finance Review International, Vol. 10 No. 1, pp. 75-94. https://doi.org/10.1108/CFRI-07-2018-0067
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2019, Emerald Publishing Limited