scholarly journals Performance Pricing Covenants and Corporate Loan Spreads

Author(s):  
Kamphol Panyagometh ◽  
Gordon S. Roberts ◽  
Aron A. Gottesman ◽  
Mehdi Beyhaghi
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manthos D Delis ◽  
Sizhe Hong ◽  
Nikos Paltalidis ◽  
Dennis Philip

Abstract We suggest that forward guidance, via publicly committing the central bank to future actions and creating associated expectations, fundamentally affects bank lending decisions independently of other forms of monetary policy. To test this hypothesis, we build a forward guidance measure based on the language used in the Federal Open Market Committee meetings and match this measure with syndicated loans. Our results show that expansionary forward guidance decreases corporate loan spreads and that this effect is stronger for well-capitalized banks lending to riskier firms. Forward guidance also affects nonprice lending terms, such as covenants, performance pricing provisions, and the loan syndicate structure. Additionally, banks tend to initiate new lending relationships with lower spreads after forward guidance issuance.


2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kamphol Panyagometh ◽  
Gordon S. Roberts ◽  
Aron A. Gottesman

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anthony Saunders ◽  
Alessandro Spina ◽  
Sascha Steffen ◽  
Daniel Streitz

2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ca Nguyen ◽  
Alejandro Pacheco

PurposeThis study has two primary objectives. First, it analyzes the information content of confidentiality strictness in corporate loan credit agreements. Second, it examines how confidentiality strictness impacts covenant design, lending syndicate structure and loan pricing.Design/methodology/approachUsing a sample of 6,327 loan credit agreements originated by US public firms in the period of 1996–2017, this study measures the confidentiality strictness in loan contracts using textual analyses that capture the appearance of confidentiality-related words and the length of confidentiality provision. All regressions include relevant loan characteristics, firm-specific accounting variables, industry and year fixed effects. To address the endogeneity concern, the paper uses borrowing firms' rival cash holdings and R&D expenditures to instrument for confidentiality strictness in two-staged least square regressions.FindingsBorrowers which have higher R&D and operate in more competitive product markets have tighter confidentiality policies. Furthermore, this study reveals that confidentiality strictness is negatively associated with the imposition of financial covenants, especially performance covenants. Loan contracts for borrowers with stricter confidentiality on average have more relaxed covenant intensity, measured by the number of covenants. The study also shows that stricter confidentiality attracts finance companies, which have strong expertise in product markets of their parent firms, into the lending syndicate. However, confidentiality-conscious borrowers with higher degree of information asymmetry are subject to higher loan spreads.Originality/valueThis study provides the first examination of confidentiality policies in loan contracts and supports the idea that loan provisions are not simply made of “boilerplate” language. The results suggest that, for confidentiality-sensitive borrowers, the greater exposure to product market competition helps control managerial slack and substitute monitoring from financial markets.


2017 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
pp. 40-71 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zahn Bozanic ◽  
Lin Cheng ◽  
Tzachi Zach

In this study, we seek to understand whether soft information conveyed by contracting language found in private loan agreements is informative regarding borrower risk. We proxy for credit-risk-relevant soft information using Loughran and McDonald’s uncertainty measure. We first examine initial contract terms and find that, incremental to traditional summary measures of credit risk, increased contractual uncertainty is associated with higher initial loan spreads and a greater likelihood of using dynamic and performance-pricing covenants. We then turn to examine realized credit risk over the life of the loan and find that increased uncertainty is associated with a higher likelihood of future loan downgrades and loan amendments. We corroborate our results on the risk relevance of soft information by showing that the bid-ask spreads of loans trading on the secondary loan market are increasing in uncertainty. Overall, the evidence we provide is consistent with embedded linguistic cues in loan agreements publicly revealing the credit risk assessments of privately informed lenders.


2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefanie Kleimeier ◽  
Sajid M. Chaudhry
Keyword(s):  

2017 ◽  
Vol 24660396 ◽  
pp. 75-94
Author(s):  
Sang wook Lee ◽  

Author(s):  
Yan Hu ◽  
Connie X. Mao ◽  
Lalitha Naveen
Keyword(s):  

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