Bank Relationships and Firm Profitability
This paper examines how bank relationships affect firm performance. An empirical implication of recent theoretical models is that firms maintaining multiple bank relationships are less profitable than their single-bank peers. We investigate this empirical implication using a data set containing virtually all Norwegian publicly listed firms for the period 1979-1995. We find a robust and economically relevant negative two-way correspondence between the number of relationships and sales profitability. We also find that firms replacing a single relationship are on average smaller and younger than those firms choosing not to replace a single relationship.
Year of publication: |
2001
|
---|---|
Authors: | Degryse, Hans ; Ongena, Steven |
Published in: |
Financial Management. - Financial Management Association - FMA. - Vol. 30.2001, 1
|
Publisher: |
Financial Management Association - FMA |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Jakovljević, Sanja, (2020)
-
Rules versus discretion in loan rate setting
Cerqueiro, Geraldo, (2007)
-
Identifying empty creditors with a shock and micro-data
Degryse, Hans, (2021)
- More ...