ISBN:
9781839820588
Inhalt:
This chapter studies banks’ loan pricing behavior in mainland China during 2003–2013 by applying panel regressions to firm-level loan data and the estimated default likelihood for listed companies. The authors find that with the progress of market-oriented financial reforms, banks generally require compensation for their exposure to borrowers’ default risks. It is even more so if the borrower is a non-state-owned enterprise (non-SOE), mainly due to the pricing behavior of the Big Four banks. Bank lending rates are shown to be less sensitive to the default risks of state-owned enterprises (SOEs). Our results also reveal that banks priced in firm default risks before 2008 financial crisis, but not necessarily so after the crisis. As for industries, we find that after the 2008 Global Financial Crisis, the real estate sector and other government-supported industries tended to enjoy better terms on loan pricing in terms of default risks. We believe the main reason is that the government stimulus policies tilted toward those industries that have played crucial roles in China’s economic growth.
In:
Emerging market finance, Bingley, U.K. : Emerald Publishing Limited, 2020, (2020), Seite 55-73, 9781839820588
In:
Emerald Publishing Limited, 9781839820601
In:
year:2020
In:
pages:55-73
Sprache:
Englisch
DOI:
10.1108/S1569-376720200000021004
URL:
Volltext
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