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Lending to small businesses: the role of loan maturity in addressing information problems
Authors:Hernán Ortiz-Molina  María Fabiana Penas
Affiliation:(1) Sauder School of Business, The University of British Columbia, 2053 Main Mall, Vancouver, BC, Canada , V6T 1Z2;(2) Department of Finance, University of Tilburg, Warandelaan 2 - Room K907, Tilburg, 5000 LE, Netherlands
Abstract:We investigate what determines the maturity of lines of credit to small businesses. Our results provide strong support for the hypothesis that shorter loan maturities serve to mitigate the problems associated with borrower risk and asymmetric information that are typical of small business lending. We find that maturity is shorter for firm owners that have poor credit histories, are older, and less experienced, and for firms that are more informationally opaque. Supporting the notion that collateral and maturity are substitute mechanisms in mitigating agency problems, we also find strong evidence that maturity increases with collateral pledges, that personal collateral is associated with longer maturities than business collateral, and that collateral types that better mitigate agency problems reduce the sensitivity of loan maturity to informational asymmetries and risk. Finally, while it is argued that relationship lending may mitigate information asymmetry, we find no relation between loan maturity and stronger firm-creditor ties.
Contact Information María Fabiana Penas (Corresponding author)Email:
Keywords:Loan maturity  Collateral  Small businesses  Relationship lending
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