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result(s) for
"TERMS OF LOAN"
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Green financial policy and investment-financing maturity mismatch of enterprises
by
Zhang, Ke
,
Zhang, Lingxiao
,
Bilan, Yuriy
in
debt maturity structure
,
financing cost
,
green finance policy
2024
Green financial policies play an important role in acceleration of China’s green transformation. Existing associated studies mainly focus on the qualitative analysis and descriptive analysis. However, it still lacks empirical studies. To explore the relationship between green finance policies and the investment and financing terms of enterprises, the effects of green financial policies on investment-financing maturity mismatch of A-share companies on Shanghai Stock Exchange and Shenzhen Stock Exchange from 2009 to 2020 were investigated in this study by a difference-in-difference (DID) model. Results demonstrate that green financial policies significantly alleviate short-term loans used as long-term investment in enterprises. Green financial policies inhibit investment-financing maturity mismatch of enterprises by increasing loan availability, lowering financing cost and increasing proportion of long-term loans of enterprises. Such effect is more obvious in enterprises with higher internal control quality and enterprises with more transparent information. Green financial policies can alleviate short-term loans used as long-term investment in non-state-owned enterprises more obviously than state-owned enterprises. Research results provide some references to alleviate debt risks of enterprises. Enterprises are recommended to seek steady development, fulfil social responsibilities and take green low-carbon social actions extensively.
Journal Article
Expanding access to finance : good practices and policies for micro, small, and medium enterprises
This book's prime audience is government policy-makers. It provides a policy framework for governments to increase micro, small and medium enterprises' access to financial services?one which is based on empirical evidence from around the world. Financial sector policies in many developing countries often work against the ability of commercial financial institutions to serve this market segment, albeit, often unintentionally. The framework guides governments on how to best focus scarce resources on three things: ? developing an inclusive financial sector policy; ? building healthy financial institutions; and ? investing in information infrastructure such as credit bureaus and accounting standards. The book provides examples and case studies of how such a strategy has helped to build more inclusive financial institutions and systems in many countries.
Does economic policy uncertainty shorten the loan term structure? Evidence from China
2024
Using Chinese listed companies from 2011 to 2021, we employ textual analysis to examine the influence of the subjective perception of economic policy uncertainty (SPEPU) on the loan term structure of enterprises. The results show that SPEPU shortens the loan term structure of enterprises. After robustness tests, our results are still valid. Mechanism analysis shows that SPEPU works through increasing corporate financing costs and reducing corporate ESG performance. Moreover, reducing financing constraints and improving financial environment will alleviate this phenomenon. Additionally, in state-owned enterprises, enterprises with large performance fluctuations and good internal control, this phenomenon is more pronounced. Further analysis reveals a trend of short-term borrowing for long-term use, where short-term bank loans are used to offset the shortage of long-term bond financing and fixed asset investments. The conclusions have important significance for enterprises to mitigate liquidity risk and operate smoothly during economic fluctuations.
Journal Article
The paradoxes of Russian railways’ loan policy
2021
Russian Railways is gradually increasing its loan debt, which reflects the general trend of the economy. But, taking into account the objective economic state of railway transport and its low profitability, the increase in the share of borrowed funds reduces the company efficiency. This contradicts the purpose of using the loan, the purpose of which is to increase the return on equity. While analysing the results of the transport industry, we regarded it as an infrastructure industry, whose goal is primarily to provide macroeconomic indicators, and the problems of making profit recede into the background. An important factor in the development of the Russian economy in consideration of its geographical location is the development of transport networks, in which the predominant (at present and in the future) one is railway transport. However, its technical state requires significant modernization, investments far exceeding its own resources. The state, as a sole shareholder of Russian Railways OAO, does not have the necessary financial resources to handle the modernization, so Russian Railways is turning to the capital market, even reducing profitability. Private capital is willing to invest its capital only in separate modernization projects that can provide an acceptable rate of return for them. This explains the borrowing of capital for modernization at a price far exceeding the return on equity. At present, economic losses are expected to be set off by future revenues and mainly by the multiplicative effect of the economic growth of the national economy and the resolution of geopolitical problems. The purpose of the article is to try to explain the loan policy of Russian Railways.
Journal Article
Collateralization, Bank Loan Rates, and Monitoring
by
CERQUEIRO, GERALDO
,
ROSZBACH, KASPER
,
ONGENA, STEVEN
in
Bank assets
,
Bank collateral
,
Bank loans
2016
We show that collateral plays an important role in the design of debt contracts, the provision of credit, and the incentives of lenders to monitor borrowers. Using a unique data set from a large bank containing timely assessments of collateral values, we find that the bank responded to a legal reform that exogenously reduced collateral values by increasing interest rates, tightening credit limits, and reducing the intensity of its monitoring of borrowers and collateral, spurring borrower delinquency on outstanding claims. We thus explain why banks are senior lenders and quantify the value of claimant priority.
Journal Article
Accounting Quality and Debt Contracting
by
Bharath, Sreedhar T.
,
Sunder, Shyam V.
,
Sunder, Jayanthi
in
Accounting
,
Accounting standards
,
Adverse selection
2008
We study the role of borrower accounting quality in debt contracting. Specifically, we examine how accounting quality affects the borrower's choice of private versus public debt market and how the design of debt contracts vary with accounting quality in the two markets. We find that accounting quality affects the choice of the market, with poorer accounting quality borrowers preferring private debt, i.e., bank loans. This is consistent with banks possessing superior information access and processing abilities that reduce adverse selection costs for borrowers. We also find that accounting quality has an economically significant but differential impact on contract design in the two markets consistent with differences in recontracting flexibility across the two markets. In the case of private debt, since there is greater recontracting flexibility, both the price (i.e., interest) and non-price (i.e., maturity and collateral) terms are significantly more stringent for poorer accounting quality borrowers, unlike public debt where only the price terms are more stringent. The impact of accounting quality on interest spreads of public debt is 2.5 times that of the private debt, since the price terms alone reflect the variation in accounting quality.
Journal Article
Debt market trends and predictors of specialization: An analysis of Pakistani corporate sector
by
Mata, Mário Nuno
,
Rita, João Xavier
,
Khan, Kanwal Iqbal
in
Asymmetry
,
Borrowing
,
Capital structure
2021
Recently, debt structure research has started focusing on the strategic perspective of financing choices, particularly to understand the reasons for debt specialization (DS). This paper examines trends of specialization over time and industry by using a comprehensive dataset on types of debt employed by the public limited companies during 2009-2018. The objective of the current study is to analyze the effect of debt market conditions by identifying significant predictors of DS. Time-series and cross-sectional results confirm the existence of DS, which is further validated by the findings of the cluster analysis. The empirical results indicate that overall, 61% of the companies solely rely on a single type of debt, mostly on short-term obligations accompanied by long-term secured and other debts. Moreover, small, mature, rated, group-affiliated, and low-leverage companies incline more towards this strategy. Credit rating, debt maturity, financial and interest coverage ratios serve as the primary determinants of the debt market that are significantly associated with the measures of DS. The results contribute to the capital structure literature by specifying that financing choice has an important implication in deciding the debt structure composition of the organizations.
Journal Article
The Total Cost of Corporate Borrowing in the Loan Market: Don't Ignore the Fees
2016
More than 80% of U.S. syndicated loans contain at least one fee type and contracts typically specify a menu of spreads and fee types. We test the predictions of existing theories on the main purposes of fees and provide supporting evidence that: (1) fees are used to price options embedded in loan contracts such as the drawdown option for credit lines and the cancellation option in term loans, and (2) fees are used to screen borrowers based on the likelihood of exercising these options. We also propose a new total-cost-of-borrowing measure that includes various fees charged by lenders.
Journal Article
Internal Control Weakness and Bank Loan Contracting: Evidence from SOX Section 404 Disclosures
by
Song, Byron Y.
,
Zhang, Liandong
,
Kim, Jeong-Bon
in
A FORUM ON INTERNAL CONTROL REPORTING AND CORPORATE DEBT
,
Accounting methods
,
Auditing
2011
Using a sample of borrowing firms that disclosed internal control weaknesses (ICW) under Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, this study compares various features of loan contracts between firms with ICW and those without ICW. Our results show the following. First, the loan spread is higher for ICW firms than for non-ICW firms by about 28 basis points, after controlling for other known determinants of loan contract terms. Second, firms with more severe, company-level ICW pay significantly higher loan rates than those with less severe, account-level ICW. Third, lenders impose tighter nonprice terms on firms with ICW than on those without ICW. Fourth, fewer lenders are attracted to loan contracts involving firms with ICW. Finally, our within-firm analyses show that banks increase loan rates charged to ICW firms after their disclosure of internal control problems and that banks reduce loan rates after firms remediate previously reported ICW.
Journal Article
Do Lenders Still Monitor When They Can Securitize Loans?
2014
We examine how securitization markets affect the role of banks as monitors in corporate lending. We find that banks active in securitization impose looser covenants on borrowers at origination. After origination, these borrowers take on substantially more risk than do borrowers of non-securitization-active banks. We use borrowers' geographic locations to instrument for borrower-lender matching to distinguish the effect of securitization on the banks' ex post monitoring from its effect on ex ante screening. We further investigate direct evidence of banks' monitoring role by examining their actions following covenant violations and find that securitization-active lenders are more likely to grant waivers without changing loan terms. Our results suggest that banks exert less effort on ex post monitoring when they can securitize loans.
Journal Article