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Happily ever after? Lender diversification and performance sensitivity in post-IPO loans

  • Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Going public reduces information asymmetry between a firm's incumbent and potential new lenders. However, we show that while loan spreads are lower in post-IPO loans due to increased lender competition, the likelihood of having interest-increasing performance-pricing, which automatically increases spreads if firm performance deteriorates, is substantially heightened, only for loans from new lenders. This indicates that new lenders remain skeptical despite a more “level playing field.” Newly public firms need to commit to performance-sensitive debt to convince outside lenders, despite gaining a credible mechanism to disseminate information to them. Pricing grids do get amended more often ex-post for such loans, reflecting a lender learning process. Newly public firms are indeed still more likely to obtain loans from new lenders post-IPO. Our results suggest that performance pricing can serve to address the remaining information gap with new lenders beyond hard-information disclosure, allowing firms to better diversify their lender base.

Original languageEnglish
Article number102774
JournalJournal of Corporate Finance
Volume92
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2025

Keywords

  • IPO
  • Lender diversification
  • Performance pricing
  • Relationship lending

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