Bank Lending Behavior
Paper Session
Sunday, Jan. 8, 2017 3:15 PM – 5:15 PM
Sheraton Grand Chicago, Chicago Ballroom IX
- Chair: Elena Loutskina, University of Virginia
The Economic Consequences of Borrower Information Sharing: Relationship Dynamics and Investment
Abstract
I use the introduction of a US commercial credit bureau to examine how credit relationships are affected by information sharing. My within firm- and lender-time tests exploit the fact that firms have ongoing relationships with multiple lenders that join the bureau in a staggered pattern. I find information sharing reduces relationship-switching costs, particularly for firms that are young, small, or have had no defaults. Information sharing shortens contract maturities in new relationships, and reduces lenders’ willingness to provide additional financing to their delinquent borrowers. My results highlight the mixed effects of transparency-improving financial technologies on credit access.Loan Terms and Collateral: Evidence From the Bilateral Repo Market
Abstract
We study secured lending contracts using a novel, loan-by-loan database of bilateral repurchase agreements in which borrower quality is fixed and collateral quality is known. Holding all risk factors constant except collateral quality, we show that loans on riskier collateral have higher spreads, that is, they remain riskier even though lenders require higher margins. We also document that lower-quality loans have longer maturity, driven by borrower rollover concerns. Our results suggest that maturity is not lenders’ primary risk management tool. Holding loan quality constant (including collateral), we show that one point of spread substitutes for approximately 9 points of margin.CDS and Credit: Testing the Small Bang Theory of the Financial Universe With Micro Data
Abstract
Does hedging motivate CDS trading and does that affect the availability of credit? To answer these questions we couple comprehensive bank-firm level CDS trading data from the Depository Trust and Clearing Corporation with the German credit register containing bilateral bank-firm credit exposures. We find that following the Small Bang in the European CDS market, extant credit relationships with riskier firms increase banks’ CDS trading and hedging of these firms. Holding more CDS contracts of safer firms leads banks to supply relatively more credit to them. Only if banks were properly hedged before the Small Bang they take more risk.Discussant(s)
Anjan Thakor
, Washington University-St. Louis
Justin Murfin
, Yale University
Erik Gilje
, University of Pennsylvania
Martin Oehmke
, Columbia University
JEL Classifications
- G2 - Financial Institutions and Services