Nice to Be on the A-List
Hamao
Yasushi
author
Kutsuna
Kenji
author
Peek
Joe
author
Columbia University. Center on Japanese Economy and Business
originator
text
Working papers
New York
Center on Japanese Economy and Business, Columbia University
2012
This study addresses an important shortcoming of most of the existing literature on credit availability by including a set of unlisted firms (which are the firms most likely to be bank dependent) in the analysis, and by investigating differences between the treatment of listed and unlisted firms by their lenders. We find evidence consistent with evergreening behavior by banks toward listed firms, consistent with prior studies. However, the more striking result is that banks appear to treat the smaller, unlisted firms differently, being much less willing to engage in evergreening behavior for these borrowers. The difference in treatment of unlisted firms relative to listed firms does not appear to be related to systematic differences in size between the two groups of firms. Thus, it appears that the distinguishing characteristic that determines whether a bank might evergreen loans to a firm is whether or not the firm is listed. Furthermore, this effect appears to be stronger for those firms listed on the more prestigious Tokyo Stock Exchange compared to firms listed on other exchanges; that is, being on the list (being listed) matters, and being on the A-list matters even more. Moreover, among listed firms, for which data on ownership by banks are available, a higher concentration of ownership of the firm by either the main bank or the firm’s top three lenders increases the likelihood of the firm obtaining increased loans, suggesting that bank ownership of the firm stimulates evergreening behavior to a greater degree.
Banking
Center on Japanese Economy and Business Working Papers
304
http://hdl.handle.net/10022/AC:P:14404
English
NNC
NNC
2012-08-15 15:16:59 -0400
2012-09-20 13:36:30 -0400
8424
eng