Conference Agenda
Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 1st Nov 2024, 01:04:24am CET
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Session Overview |
Session | |||
CF 16: Creditors
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Presentations | |||
ID: 473
(Don’t) Feed the Mouth that Bites: Trade Credit Strategies among Rival Customers Sharing Suppliers 1University of Toronto, Canada; 2Terry College of Business at the University of Georgia; 3Naveen Jindal School of Management at the University of Texas at Dallas Product market rivals often source upstream inputs from the same set of suppliers. Because these inputs are typically sold on credit, sharing a supplier could create incentives for customers to strategically demand trade credit terms in order to prevent the supplier from providing liquidity to rivals. In this paper, we empirically document this strategy and show that customers prolong payable days with suppliers that also sell to their rivals. For identification, we exploit the U.S. government’s QuickPay reform, which permanently shortened the government’s payable days to small business contractors, creating an exogenous liquidity influx. We find that after QuickPay, affected contractors extend more trade credit to their corporate customers. In response, rivals of these corporate customers begin to extract more trade credit from the shared suppliers, indicating their efforts to pull away these suppliers’ liquidity from the competitors already benefiting from QuickPay. Our paper reveals an underexplored incentive in supply-chain relationships, namely, the incentive to avoid “feeding the mouth that bites,” and how it shapes the allocation of trade credit.
ID: 519
Underwriter competition and institutional loan pricing 1Department of Economics and Finance, City University of Hong Kong; 2Paul Merage School of Business, University of California at Irvine; 3Nanyang Business School, Nanyang Technological University The institutional-loan market is segmented and has specialized underwriters. We document that more intense underwriter competition in a given segment is associated with lower initial loan spreads and more upward rate adjustments. We provide evidence that competition affects underwriters' trade-off between bidding low initial rates to win underwriting mandates and incurring reputational costs when adjusting rates upward in the book-building process. Moreover, stronger underwriter competition lowers final loan spreads without resulting in more defaults or hurting borrowers' access to investors. The impact of underwriter competition is moderated by the uncertainty about investor demand and the existence of prior borrower-underwriter relationships.
ID: 1114
Financial Shocks, Productivity, and Prices 1NYU Stern School of Business, United States of America; 2University of Western Ontraio; 3National Bank of Belgium We study the interconnection between the productivity and pricing effects of financial shocks. Combining administrative records on firm-level output prices and quantities with quasi-experimental variation in credit supply, we show that a tightening of credit conditions has a persistent, yet delayed, negative effect on firms’ long-run physical productivity growth (TFPQ) but also induces firms to change their pricing policies. As a result, commonly used revenue-based productivity measures (TFPR)—which conflate the pricing and productivity effects—offer biased predictions regarding the consequences of financial shocks for firms’ productivity growth, underestimating the long-run elasticity of physical productivity to credit supply by almost half. Moreover, we show that the pricing adjustments themselves also have productivity implications. Firms coping with a contraction of credit use low pricing as a source of internal financing, allowing them to avoid cutting expenditures on productivity-enhancing activities, thereby softening the impact of financial shocks on long-run productivity growth.
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