
ABSTRACTWe show that collateral plays an important role in the design of debt contracts, the provision of credit, and the incentives of lenders to monitor borrowers. Using a unique data set from a large bank containing timely assessments of collateral values, we find that the bank responded to a legal reform that exogenously reduced collateral values by increasing interest rates, tightening credit limits, and reducing the intensity of its monitoring of borrowers and collateral, spurring borrower delinquency on outstanding claims. We thus explain why banks are senior lenders and quantify the value of claimant priority.
1402 Accounting, 2003 Finance, 10003 Department of Finance, 2002 Economics and Econometrics, 330 Economics
1402 Accounting, 2003 Finance, 10003 Department of Finance, 2002 Economics and Econometrics, 330 Economics
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