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Effect of climate-related risk on the costs of bank loans: Evidence from syndicated loan markets in emerging economies
Institution:1. Hamburg University, Department of Economics, Germany;2. Tallinn University of Technology, Department of Economics and Finance, Estonia;3. Halle Institute for Economic Research, Germany;1. College of Business Administration, Capital University of Economics and Business, Zhangjialukou Road No.121, Fengtai District, Beijing, China;2. Department of Business and Information Technology, Missouri University of Science and Technology, 101 Fulton Hall, 301 W. 14th Street, 65409 Rolla, MO, USA;3. Nankai Business School, Nankai University, 94 Weijin Road, Tianjin, China;1. Bank of Finland Institute for Emerging Economies (BOFIT), Snellmaninaukio, PO Box 160, FI-00101 Helsinki, Finland;2. EM Strasbourg Business School, University of Strasbourg, France
Abstract:Based on a novel dataset that combined syndicated loans originated in the emerging market economies with greenhouse gas emission intensity data of borrowers, this study examines whether and to what extent banks in these emerging markets have factored in climate transition risk in their lending decisions. On loan pricing, our results suggest that banks in these emerging markets have started to price-in climate transition risk for loans to emissions-intensive sector since the Paris Agreement. This could reflect their increased awareness of a climate-transition risk towards such firms. The extent of the transition risk premium is also found to be dependent on the environmental attitude of banks. Specifically, green banks are found to charge a higher loan spread than other banks, when lending to the same brown firm after the Paris Agreement. Apart from pricing a transition risk premium in the loan spread, we find evidence that banks may also consider imposing more stringent non-pricing contractual terms, such as shortening loan tenor and imposing collateral requirement, on brown firms especially when the associated credit risk impacts on these firms are more uncertain.
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