Abstract

Using a unique sample of Italian manufacturing firms, we investigate the impact of relationship lending on firms’ use of trade credit. We find that firms maintaining close and long-lasting relationships with their main banks are associated with higher amounts of trade credit extended by suppliers. This result is robust to alternative measures of trade credit and relationship lending, and to different estimation techniques. We also analyze the mechanisms driving the association between relationship lending and the use of trade credit. Regression results suggest that the positive link between accounts payable and relationship lending is especially significant for firms that use to provide soft information to their lenders and for companies with greater relational abilities.Plain English Summary The existence of close and long lasting lending relationships positively affects the amount of trade credit manufacturing firms receive from their suppliers. By relying on the Survey on Italian Manufacturing Firms, we show that the positive link between relationship lending and the use of trade credit is driven by two channels: private information and relational capital. In a policy perspective, our findings reveal a need for banking regulation and supervision to encompass banking business models in evaluating banks. The current approach might not be suitable for local banks investing in soft information acquisition and could weaken SMEs’ chances to receive both bank financing and trade credit from suppliers. Moreover, from a managerial point of view, our results uncover the relevance of firms’ ability to create strong relationships with banks, suppliers, and other companies that may help alleviating financial constraints.

Highlights

  • Behind bank lending, trade credit is the most important source of external financing for small and medium-sized enterprises

  • By improving access to bank financing, relationship lending could have reduced firms’ need for trade credit, consistently with the theory of substitutability between bank and trade credit. This view is not confirmed in our framework, in Appendix B, we investigate the role played by credit rationing in shaping the link between relationship lending and trade credit use. 16The control variables included in the estimation are: Sales (Log), Age (Log), Sales Growth, Short-term Debt Ratio, Liquidity Ratio, ROA, Asset Tangibility, Cashflow (Log), Listed, Group, and Financial Development

  • This paper investigated the impact of relationship lending on the amount of trade credit granted by suppliers

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Summary

Introduction

Trade credit is the most important source of external financing for small and medium-sized enterprises. Regression results suggest that the positive link between relationship lending and the amount of trade credit received is driven by the adoption of private information in both financing processes and by the firm’s relational ability. In providing these findings, we contribute to different strands of the current literature. In 2000, the ratio of trade payables to total assets was on average 30.3% against 16% of short-term bank debt (Russo and Leva, 2004) In this context, relationships with banks and suppliers result to be of the outmost importance for the financial life of many businesses, and analyzing the link between them may provide interesting insights about firms’ financing behavior

Institutional background
Trade credit and bank financing
Information production and benefits of relationship lending
Hypotheses
Data sources
The use of trade credit
Relationship lending
Control variables
Econometric specification
Relationship lending and the use of trade credit
Addressing endogeneity concerns
The multidimensional nature of lending relationships
The role of private information and firms’ relational capital
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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