2014
DOI: 10.1111/jfir.12042
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The Choice Between Callable and Noncallable Bonds

Abstract: We examine the choice and the offer spreads between callable and noncallable bonds. We find significant differences by industry sector and therefore segment our results by financial and nonfinancial industries. For the financial sector, the popularity of callable and noncallable bonds is significantly related to the economic environment. Financial and high-grade nonfinancial callable bonds are also more likely to be issued via a shelf prospectus. Although firms that issue callable bonds do not consistently dis… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 36 publications
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“…The table shows that the number of bonds with a low rating of B or C is small; for example there is only one C-rated bond in the maturity group 13-20 years. The reason is that speculative-grade bonds frequently contain call options which leads to their exclusion from our sample (see also Booth et al 2014). In the following we report results for ratings B and C with the caveat that these results-particularly for long maturities-are based on few observations and therefore are noisy.…”
Section: Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The table shows that the number of bonds with a low rating of B or C is small; for example there is only one C-rated bond in the maturity group 13-20 years. The reason is that speculative-grade bonds frequently contain call options which leads to their exclusion from our sample (see also Booth et al 2014). In the following we report results for ratings B and C with the caveat that these results-particularly for long maturities-are based on few observations and therefore are noisy.…”
Section: Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While Table demonstrates the informational implications of Synchronicity among issuers with the potential for agency conflicts associated with financial distress, the positive significance of Synchronicity implies that higher Synchronicity is associated with a greater likelihood of call provisions for firms that are not financially distressed. Prior research finds that changes in the economic environment motivate the use of call provisions by investment grade issuers (Booth, Gounopoulos, and Skinner, ). In (untabulated) pairwise correlation analysis, we find that higher Synchronicity among investment grade issuers is associated with greater exposure to business cycle fluctuations and, as such, interest rates.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%