Study Of Competition Among Credit Rating Agencies In India
Material type: TextDescription: 81-94 pSubject(s): In: JOURNAL OF ACCOUNTING AND FINANCESummary: India has a very advanced G-sec market, but its corporate bond market is relatively under developed. Size of the corporate debt market is infinitesimal compared to the world debt market. There are seven registered credit rating agencies (CRAs) in India which rate debt securities out of which three rating agencies i.e. CRISIL, CARE and ICRA hold 80% of the market share. Debt market in India has increased over years. Number of rating and grading services offered by the rating agencies have also expanded considerably. This will eventually lead to more competition among rating agencies in India. It would be beneficial to measure competition among rating agencies and their market concentration. This paper measures competition and market concentration using Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) and HHI inverse. It is a quantitative measure of industry concentration that accounts for both the number of firms in the industry and each firm's market share. This measure takes into account rating revenues of credit rating agencies and number of outstanding securities in each category. This study used secondary data and the required data are taken from the regulatory disclosures made by the CRAs. The period of the study includes five years from 2011-12 to 2015-16. Based on rating revenue, this study found that market is highly concentrated and the majority of the market share is held by three CRAs namely CRISIL, CARE and ICRA. Based on number of outstanding securities in each category of securities, it is found that market is a) highly concentrated in financial institutions and structured obligations; and b) moderately concentrated in corporate securities and government and co-operative societies. It is also found that the market concentration has been decreasing over the years for categories such as corporate, government, co-operative societies and structured obligations and increasing for the category financial institutions. It is believed that a lack of competition, in part the result of regulatory barriers, along with mandated usage by many financial market participants has resulted in a dysfunctional credit ratings industry in India.Item type | Current library | Call number | Vol info | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Journal Article | Main Library | Vol 31, No 1/ 5558106JA8 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 5558106JA8 | |||||
Journals and Periodicals | Main Library On Display | JOURNAL/FIN/Vol 31, No 1/5558106 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Vol 31, No 1 (01/01/2018) | Not for loan | October 16 - March 17 | 5558106 |
India has a very advanced G-sec market, but its corporate bond market is relatively under developed. Size of the corporate debt market is infinitesimal compared to the world debt market. There are seven registered credit rating agencies (CRAs) in India which rate debt securities out of which three rating agencies i.e. CRISIL, CARE and ICRA hold 80% of the market share. Debt market in India has increased over years. Number of rating and grading services offered by the rating agencies have also expanded considerably. This will eventually lead to more competition among rating agencies in India. It would be beneficial to measure competition among rating agencies and their market concentration. This paper measures competition and market concentration using Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) and HHI inverse. It is a quantitative measure of industry concentration that accounts for both the number of firms in the industry and each firm's market share. This measure takes into account rating revenues of credit rating agencies and number of outstanding securities in each category. This study used secondary data and the required data are taken from the regulatory disclosures made by the CRAs. The period of the study includes five years from 2011-12 to 2015-16. Based on rating revenue, this study found that market is highly concentrated and the majority of the market share is held by three CRAs namely CRISIL, CARE and ICRA. Based on number of outstanding securities in each category of securities, it is found that market is a) highly concentrated in financial institutions and structured obligations; and b) moderately concentrated in corporate securities and government and co-operative societies. It is also found that the market concentration has been decreasing over the years for categories such as corporate, government, co-operative societies and structured obligations and increasing for the category financial institutions. It is believed that a lack of competition, in part the result of regulatory barriers, along with mandated usage by many financial market participants has resulted in a dysfunctional credit ratings industry in India.
There are no comments on this title.