贷款机构还在监控吗?杠杆贷款和契约的寻找

Frederick Tung
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引用次数: 2

摘要

放贷机构经常影响企业管理者的决策,这曾经是一种传统智慧。契约限制了借款人的风险承担,并强制规定了保护贷款人的具体肯定性义务。然而,最近的政策讨论对贷款市场转向各种形式的高风险贷款感到遗憾。所谓的杠杆贷款——风险相对较高,低于投资级别的贷款——按未偿还美元计算增加了一倍多,从2010年的约5500亿美元增长到2019年的1.2万亿美元。随着时间的推移,这些高风险贷款在贷款市场中所占的份额越来越大。更多的杠杆贷款也是“低门槛贷款”,发行时没有传统的金融维护条款。监管机构还担心“附加回调”——借款人对预期收益进行向上调整的做法日益增多,这往往会削弱杠杆约束。此外,银行监管改革激励了“从发起到分销”的贷款银团,使非银行贷款机构能够持有和交易风险太大、银行无法保留的杠杆贷款。银团贷款现在越来越多地涉及非银行或“机构”贷款人,如对冲基金、贷款抵押债券(clo)和共同基金。评论人士对新型风险贷款感到担忧,因为它们缺乏传统的契约,贷款人的干预也越来越少,这可能预示着债务市场的不稳定。同时,契约保护的弱化可能导致公司治理的弱化。在这篇文章中,我对这些担忧做出了回应,认为它们可能被夸大了。杠杆贷款和低门槛贷款所占比例的不断上升,未必证明债务发行无纪律。许多看似麻烦的贷款是作为交易的一部分发放的,其中包括带有传统契约和交叉违约条款的贷款,这些条款有效地约束了借款人的行为。虽然附加回调可能会增加公司的杠杆,但它们也可能提高基于收益的金融契约的信息量。此外,尽管美国上市公司违反贷款契约的发生率大幅下降,但最近的研究表明,契约已经变得更加有效。实际上,契约是用更少的钱做更多的事。金融契约在区分困难情况和非困难情况方面,一般已变得不那么具有限制性,而且更具歧视性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Do Lenders Still Monitor? Leveraged Lending and the Search for Covenants
It was once conventional wisdom that lenders routinely influenced corporate managers’ decision making. Covenants constrained borrower risk taking and compelled specific affirmative obligations to protect lenders. Recent policy discussion, however, laments loan markets’ turn to various forms of high-risk lending. So-called leveraged loans — relatively risky, below-investment-grade loans — more than doubled in outstanding dollar terms, growing from about $550 billion in 2010 to $1.2 trillion by 2019. These risky loans have taken up a larger and larger share of the loan markets over time. More leveraged loans are also “covenant-lite,” issued without traditional financial maintenance covenants. And regulators worry about “add-backs” — borrowers’ growing practice of making upward adjustments to projected earnings that tend to weaken leverage constraints. Moreover, bank regulatory changes have incentivized “originate-to-distribute” loan syndications that enable non-bank lenders to hold and trade leveraged loans too risky for banks to keep. Syndicated lending now involves greater and greater participation by nonbank or “institutional” lenders like hedge funds, CLOs (collateralized loan obligations), and mutual funds. Commentators worry about the new species of risky loans, with their dearth of traditional covenants and the fewer instances of lender intervention, which may portend instability in debt markets. At the same time, weakened covenant protections may lead to weakened corporate governance. In this Article, I respond to these fears, arguing that they may be overblown. The increasing share of leveraged and covenant-lite loans may not necessarily evidence undisciplined debt issuance. Many seemingly troublesome loans are issued as subparts of deals that include loans with traditional covenants and cross-default provisions, which effectively constrain borrower behavior. Though add-backs may increase firm leverage, they may also improve the informativeness of earnings-based financial covenants. In addition, while the incidence of loan covenant violations has dropped dramatically across U.S. public firms, recent research suggests that covenants have become more efficient. In effect, covenants are doing more with less. Financial covenants have generally become less restrictive and more discriminating in differentiating distress from non-distress situations.
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