Voluntary disclosures and peer-to-peer lending decisions: Evidence from the repeated game

IF 1.3 Q3 BUSINESS
Yan Li, Cungang Li, Yijun Gao
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This study investigates the effect of voluntary disclosures on lending decisions in the repeated game. Using a unique dataset from a peer-to-peer lending platform, “ppdai” ( paipaidai ), we document that voluntary disclosures in the repeated game play a stronger role in promoting funding success than those in the one-shot game. We argue that voluntary disclosures improve the bidding activity in the repeated game through which they increase funding success. In addition, the greater impact of voluntary disclosures on funding success in the repeated game only holds for loans without a personal guarantee attribution. Our extended results suggest that the subjective voluntary disclosures in the repeated game have greater information content only when borrowers have a successful borrowing experience. We also point out that voluntary disclosures in the repeated game are associated with a lower probability of default. Our results are robust to the Heckman two-step estimation that addresses the self-selection effect and a specification designed to rule out the alternative explanation from reputation in the repeated game. Our study provides new insights into the real effects of costless, voluntary and unverifiable disclosures on lending decisions.
自愿披露和点对点借贷决策:来自重复博弈的证据
本研究探讨了在重复博弈中自愿披露对贷款决策的影响。利用来自p2p借贷平台“拍拍贷”(拍拍贷)的独特数据集,我们证明了在重复游戏中的自愿披露在促进融资成功方面比在一次性游戏中发挥更大的作用。我们认为,自愿披露改善了重复博弈中的竞标活动,从而提高了融资成功率。此外,在重复博弈中,自愿披露对融资成功的更大影响仅适用于没有个人担保归属的贷款。我们的扩展结果表明,只有当借款人有成功的借贷经历时,重复博弈中的主观自愿披露才具有更大的信息含量。我们还指出,在重复博弈中,自愿披露与较低的违约概率有关。我们的结果对于解决自我选择效应的Heckman两步估计和旨在排除重复博弈中声誉的替代解释的规范是稳健的。我们的研究为无成本、自愿和无法核实的信息披露对贷款决策的实际影响提供了新的见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
317
审稿时长
5 weeks
期刊介绍: Frontiers of Business Research in China (FBR) is a double-blind refereed quarterly journal in business research. FBR offers a multidisciplinary forum for academics, practitioners, and policy makers that focuses on business administration, and encourages interdisciplinary studies and interactions between Chinese and international researchers. FBR publishes original academic and practical research articles that extend, test, or build management theories, as well as contributions to business administration practice, either in the Greater China region or beyond. The Journal also publishes related commentaries and case studies. FBR invites submissions of high-quality manuscripts in all areas of business administration, without limitations on research methods. Major areas of interest include, but are not limited to: Accounting, Finance, Human resources, International business, Marketing, Management information systems, Operations management, Organizational behavior, and Strategic management.
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