FIN-01-005

NYU Stern School of Business


Commercial Bank Underwriting of Credit-Enhanced Bonds: Are there Benefits to the Issuer?

July 23, 2001

Anthony Saunders, and Roger D. Stover

ABSTRACT

Recent studies have expanded the commercial bank certification hypothesis to include banks acting in an underwriting capacity. This paper further develops that research by focusing on the industrial revenue bond market in which banks have the unique opportunity to simultaneously act as both credit guarantor and underwriter. When explicitly allowing for bank-issued standby letters of credit (guarantees), we find significantly greater yield spreads for those bonds underwritten by commercial banks compared to bonds underwritten by investment banks. Overall, no net benefit appears to accrue to the bond issuer when attempting to achieve joint (or double) certification benefits by employing commercial banks as both credit guarantor and underwriters except in the special case where the same bank acts as both guarantor and underwriter. This latter result is consistent with an "economy of scope" in monitoring and reusing information.

Anthony Saunders
Institution: Stern School of Business, New York University, 44th West 4th Street, New York, NY 10012
Email: asaunder@stern.nyu.edu
Telephone: (212) 998-0711
Homepage: http://www.stern.nyu.edu/~asaunder/

Roger D. Stover
Institution: College of Business, Iowa State University

To download a copy of this paper click here
To request a copy of this paper click here

The Finance Department Working Paper Series has been generously sponsored by