Soft Information in Loan Agreements

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Abstract

In this study, we seek to understand whether soft information conveyed by contracting language found in private loan agreements is informative regarding borrower risk. We proxy for credit-risk-relevant soft information using Loughran and McDonald’s uncertainty mea-sure. We first examine initial contract terms and find that, incremental to traditional sum-mary measures of credit risk, increased contractual uncertainty is associated with higher initial loan spreads and a greater likelihood of using dynamic and performance-pricing cove-nants. We then turn to examine realized credit risk over the life of the loan and find that increased uncertainty is associated with a higher likelihood of future loan downgrades and loan amendments. We corroborate our results on the risk relevance of soft information by showing that the bid-ask spreads of loans trading on the secondary loan market are increas-ing in uncertainty. Overall, the evidence we provide is consistent with embedded linguistic cues in loan agreements publicly revealing the credit risk assessments of privately informed lenders.

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APA

Bozanic, Z., Cheng, L., & Zach, T. (2018). Soft Information in Loan Agreements. Journal of Accounting, Auditing and Finance, 33(1), 40–71. https://doi.org/10.1177/0148558X16689653

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