Abstract
Little is known about the characteristics or behavior of commercial paper issuers at the firm level, or about the reasons for the countercyclical issuance of commercial paper in the aggregate. In order to examine these issues we construct a new panel data-set linking Moody's data on commercial paper outstanding with Standard and Poor's Compustat. We find that high credit quality is a requirement for entry into the commercial paper market, but that long-term credit quality (bond rating) is not a sufficient statistic for measuring short-term credit quality. Holding constant long-term credit quality, access to the commercial paper market depends on large size, high collateral levels, high earnings levels, low earnings variance, and large stocks of liquid assets. These characteristics allow firms to issue near riskless short-term debt and supply a near-money asset to the market, thereby reducing their interest costs by the amount of the commercial paper liquidity premium. In measuring the attributes of high credit quality, we find that firms of insufficiently high quality to access commercial paper markets maintain higher stocks of inventories and financial assets. They also display greater cash flow sensitivity of inventories and financial assets. This suggests that lower quality firms without access to commercial paper markets also face financing constraints that lead them to accumulate "buffer stocks" of liquid assets. Finally, in contrast to the known fact that aggregate commercial paper is countercyclical, we find that firm-level paper issuance and sales are positively correlated. Our data support three explanations for this apparent paradox, all of which recognize that commercial paper issuers are atypical by virtue of their unusually high short-term credit quality. First, such high quality firms use commercial paper to finance the accumulation of inventories during downturns. Second, they also use commercial paper to finance accounts receivable. This suggests that commercial paper issuers serve as intermediaries during downturns. Third, it may be that portfolio demand for commercial paper — a highly liquid, safe asset — increases during downturns. This view is consistent with our characterization of commercial paper issuers.
Keywords
Affiliated Institutions
Related Publications
Fundamentals and Stock Returns in Japan
ABSTRACT This paper relates cross‐sectional differences in returns on Japanese stocks to the underlying behavior of four variables: earnings yield, size, book to market ratio, a...
Large Shareholders as Monitors: Is There a Trade‐Off between Liquidity and Control?
This paper analyzes the incentives of large shareholders to monitor public corporations. We investigate the hypothesis that a liquid stock market reduces large shareholders' inc...
Liquidity and the 1987 stock market crash
T he Crash of October 1987 was a puzzling event puzzling not only for what happened on October 19, but also for what subsequently did not happen. In spite of the magnitude and m...
Accrued Earnings and Growth: Implications for Future Profitability and Market Mispricing
Prior research reveals that the accrual component of profitability is less persistent than the cash flow component, and that investors fail to fully appreciate their differing i...
Multifactor Explanations of Asset Pricing Anomalies
ABSTRACT Previous work shows that average returns on common stocks are related to firm characteristics like size, earnings/price, cash flow/price, book‐to‐market equity, past sa...
Publication Info
- Year
- 1995
- Type
- article
- Volume
- 42
- Pages
- 203-250
- Citations
- 279
- Access
- Closed
External Links
Social Impact
Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions
Citation Metrics
Cite This
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1016/0167-2231(95)00034-w