Big Broad Banks: How Does Cross-selling Affect Lending?

Publikation: KonferencebidragPaperForskningpeer review

Abstract

Using unique micro-data that contain the internal information on all corporate customers of a large Northern European bank, I show that combining loan and non-loan products (cross-selling) has two benefits. First, it increases credit supply, especially in recessions. Second, it increases the likelihood of receiving lenient treatment in delinquency. I argue that non-loan relationships play an important role in determining credit supply and debt renegotiation, not only by (i) mitigating information asymmetries (as suggested in earlier literature), but also by (ii) increasing the profitability of the relationship. Exploiting an exogenous and differential change in certain products' profitability due to the Basel II implementation, I estimate the causal effect of this new profit channel on credit supply. A 20 percent decrease in non-loan products' profitability (1) reduces credit supply to affected firms by 10.5 percent (500,000 USD) compared with unaffected firms, and (2) reduces likelihood of receiving lenient treatment for affected firms by 58 percent (23 pp) compared with unaffected firms, conditional on being delinquent.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
Publikationsdato2021
Antal sider50
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2021
BegivenhedASSA 2021 Virtual Annual Meeting - , WWW
Varighed: 3 jan. 20215 jan. 2021
https://www.aeaweb.org/conference/2021

Konference

KonferenceASSA 2021 Virtual Annual Meeting
Land/OmrådeWWW
Periode03/01/202105/01/2021
Internetadresse

Emneord

  • Relationship banking
  • Cross-selling
  • Credit allocation
  • Debt renegotiation

Citationsformater