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Bank Lending Standards and Access to Lines of Credit
Authors:CEM DEMIROGLU  CHRISTOPHER JAMES  ATAY KIZILASLAN
Affiliation:Cem Demiroglu is an Assistant Professor of Finance at the College of Administrative Sciences and Economics, Ko? University, at Istanbul, Turkey (E‐mail: cdemiroglu@ku.edu.tr). Christopher James is William H. Dial Sun Bank Eminent Scholar in Finance at Warrington College of Business, University of Florida (E‐mail: christopher.james@warrington.ufl.edu). Atay Kizilaslan is a Ph.D. student at the Warrington College of Business, University of Florida (E‐mail: atay.kizilaslan@warrington.ufl.edu).
Abstract:This paper examines how changes in bank lending standards are related to the availability of bank lines of credit for private and comparable public firms. Overall, we find that access to lines of credit is more contingent on bank lending standards for private than for public firms. The impact of bank lending standards is however asymmetric: while private firms are less likely than public firms to gain access to new lines when credit market conditions are tight, we find no difference between public and private firms in terms of their use or retention of pre‐existing lines. We also find that private firms without lines of credit use more trade credit when bank lending standards are tight, which is suggestive of a supply effect. Overall, the evidence suggests that “credit crunches” are likely to have a disproportionate impact on private firms. However, pre‐existing banking relationships appear to mitigate the impact of these contractions on private firms.
Keywords:G01  G21  G32  bank lending standards  lines of credit  banking relationships  corporate liquidity  trade credit  private firms
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