articleReview of Financial StudiesApr 13, 2010BRONZE OA

Distance and Private Information in Lending

Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago · American University

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Abstract

We study the effects of physical distance on the acquisition and use of private information in informationally opaque credit markets. Using a unique data set of all loan applications by small firms to a large bank, we show that borrower proximity facilitates the collection of soft information, leading to a trade-off in the availability and pricing of credit, which is more readily accessible to nearby firms albeit at higher interest rates ceteris paribus. Analyzing loan rates and firms' decision to switch lenders provides further evidence for banks' strategic use of private information. However, distance erodes our lender's ability to collect proprietary intelligence and to carve out local captive markets,…

Citation impact

1,311
total citations
FWCI
56.86
Percentile
100%
References
49
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Ceteris paribus
  • Loan
  • Business
  • Private information retrieval
  • Interest rate
  • Financial system
  • Monetary economics
  • Industrial organization
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