Published August 1991
| Version v1
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Monitoring and Reputation: The Choice between Bank Loans and Directly Placed Debt
Description
This paper determines when a debt contract will be monitored by lenders. This is the choice between borrowing directly (issuing a bond, without monitoring) and borrowing through a bank that monitors to alleviate moral hazard. This provides a theory of bank loan demand and of the role of monitoring in circumstances in which reputation effects are important. A key result is that borrowers with credit ratings toward the middle of the spectrum rely on bank loans, and in periods of high interest rates or low future profitability, higher-rated borrowers choose to borrow from banks.
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Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1086/261775
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:4959