In a lending relationship, a bank learns information on its borrowers. Adverse selection makes the usefulness and value of this information depend on the interest rates the bank charges in the different periods. The optimal intertemporal screening of borrowers calls for a monopolistic bank to smooth interest rates. In a repeated relationship, interest rates are lower than in a one-period setting; furthermore, they are less volatile and the quality of the loans is higher than under competition (with symmetric information). Information sharing may reduce both the probability that a debt will be paid and the sum of banks’ and borrowers’ profits
Theory suggests that banks ’ private information about borrowers lets them hold up borrowers for hig...
Since information asymmetries have been identified as an important source of bank profits, it may se...
We examine the effect of information sharing via credit bureaus or credit registers on banks’ incent...
In a lending relationship, a bank learns information on its borrowers. Adverse selection makes the ...
In this paper, using firm-level cross-sectional data in the US, we report that interest rates on loa...
This paper examines the impact of the quality of information that lenders gather about potential bor...
How does information sharing between lenders affect borrowers repayment behavior? We show-in a labor...
If banks have an informational monopoly about their clients, borrowers may curtail their effort leve...
Multiple bank lending induces borrowers to take too much debt when creditor rights are poorly prote...
Multiple bank lending induces borrowers to take too much debt when creditor rights are poorly protec...
Abstract. Multiple bank lending induces borrowers to take too much debt when creditor rights are poo...
Multiple bank lending induces borrowers to take too much debt when creditor rights are poorly protec...
Multiple bank lending induces borrowers to take too much debt when creditor rights are poorly protec...
While a number of empirical studies have documented benefits of lending relationships to borrowers (...
Includes supplementary materials for the online appendixThis paper studies bank learning through rep...
Theory suggests that banks ’ private information about borrowers lets them hold up borrowers for hig...
Since information asymmetries have been identified as an important source of bank profits, it may se...
We examine the effect of information sharing via credit bureaus or credit registers on banks’ incent...
In a lending relationship, a bank learns information on its borrowers. Adverse selection makes the ...
In this paper, using firm-level cross-sectional data in the US, we report that interest rates on loa...
This paper examines the impact of the quality of information that lenders gather about potential bor...
How does information sharing between lenders affect borrowers repayment behavior? We show-in a labor...
If banks have an informational monopoly about their clients, borrowers may curtail their effort leve...
Multiple bank lending induces borrowers to take too much debt when creditor rights are poorly prote...
Multiple bank lending induces borrowers to take too much debt when creditor rights are poorly protec...
Abstract. Multiple bank lending induces borrowers to take too much debt when creditor rights are poo...
Multiple bank lending induces borrowers to take too much debt when creditor rights are poorly protec...
Multiple bank lending induces borrowers to take too much debt when creditor rights are poorly protec...
While a number of empirical studies have documented benefits of lending relationships to borrowers (...
Includes supplementary materials for the online appendixThis paper studies bank learning through rep...
Theory suggests that banks ’ private information about borrowers lets them hold up borrowers for hig...
Since information asymmetries have been identified as an important source of bank profits, it may se...
We examine the effect of information sharing via credit bureaus or credit registers on banks’ incent...