ABSTRACT
Previous theoretical arguments suggest that industrial diversification provides a co-insurance effect that decreases the firm's default risk. In this paper, we endogenously estimate a firm's segment disclosure quality and investigate whether the quality of segment disclosures significantly affects bond investors' assessment of the co-insurance effect of diversification. We document that bonds issued by industrially diversified firms with high-quality segment disclosures have significantly lower yields than bonds issued by diversified firms with low-quality segment disclosures. We also find that the negative relation between industrial diversification and bond yields becomes stronger when firms improve segment disclosures as a result of FAS 131. Finally, we show that high-quality segment disclosures are associated with lower syndicated loan spreads for a subsample of loans issued by large bank syndicates, which are more likely to rely on publicly reported segment information
Keywords: corporate diversification, segment disclosure, cost of debt, co-insurance
Article Citation:
Francesca Franco, Oktay Urcan, and Florin P. Vasvari (2016) Corporate Diversification and the Cost of Debt: The Role of Segment Disclosures. The Accounting Review: July 2016, Vol. 91, No. 4, pp. 1139-1165.
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