Abstract

We investigate whether and how firm-level political uncertainty affects firms’ bank loan contracting. We find that firms facing higher firm-level political uncertainty are charged higher bank loan costs. This impact is amplified for firms with higher degrees of information asymmetry and firms with more financial constraints. Moreover, we find a positive relationship between the tightness of a loan’s non-pricing terms and the degree of firm-level political uncertainty. Specifically, firms facing higher firm-level political uncertainty are required to accept more contract covenants, general covenants, and financial covenants. Banks also charge higher annual fees for loan borrowers with higher firm-level political uncertainty. Our results are robust to various model specifications.

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