Metadata
Title
Congratulations to Prof. Daniel YANG for the paper at Journal of Accounting and Economic
Category
general
UUID
12b5030c9e2e4fde8e6af0ad9cfca124
Source URL
https://acct.hkust.edu.hk/about-department/news-highlights/congratulations-prof-...
Parent URL
https://acct.hkust.edu.hk/about-department/news-highlights
Crawl Time
2026-03-13T04:19:35+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown
# Congratulations to Prof. Daniel YANG for the paper at Journal of Accounting and Economic

**Source**: https://acct.hkust.edu.hk/about-department/news-highlights/congratulations-prof-daniel-yang-paper-journal-accounting-and
**Parent**: https://acct.hkust.edu.hk/about-department/news-highlights

FACULTY

Congratulations to Prof. Daniel YANG for the paper at Journal of Accounting and Economic

28 Aug 2024

YANG, DANIEL. “Foreign Bank Branch Participation and U.S. Syndicated Loan Contract Design"  *Journal of Accounting and Economics ,*Volume 79, Issue 1, February 2025, 101714.

Abstract

I examine whether and how foreign bank branch participation in U.S. loan syndicates influences loan contract design. I predict that foreign bank branches’ dollar funding liquidity risk and information frictions increase renegotiation costs and affect loan contract design. I find that loan contracts with greater foreign bank branch participation include fewer flexibility-reducing covenants, such as capital expenditure and balance sheet covenants, that restrict borrowers from making positive net [present value](https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/economics-econometrics-and-finance/present-value "Learn more about present value from ScienceDirect's AI-generated Topic Pages") investments. I document similar results using matched sample and plausibly exogenous variation in foreign bank branch participation. Additionally, loan contracts with greater foreign bank branch participation are more likely to feature split control rights, which give banks in revolving lines of credit the exclusive right to renegotiate. In contrast, foreign bank branches are more likely to be included in covenant-lite term loans. Overall, I show that foreign bank branch participation affects U.S. syndicated loan contract design through renegotiation costs.