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Do Borrowers Benefit from Sustainability-Linked Loans? An analysis of explicit ESG information in loan contracts and borrowers’ incentives to enter sustainability-linked loans

Torsteinsen, Eira; Englund, Sofia
Master thesis
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URI
https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3055213
Date
2022
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  • Master Thesis [4207]
Abstract
This thesis examines the explicit use of ESG information in loan contracts and borrowers'

incentives to enter sustainability-linked loans (SLLs). We explore whether shareholders

respond to announcements of sustainability-linked loan issuances andwhether companies with

sustainability-linked loans experience a higher ESG score and performance on contractual

KPis after entering the loan contract. We also investigate if there is a sustainability-linked

premium around loan issuance. We perform this analysis by comparing a sample of

sustainability-linked loans from 2017 to 2019 to a matched sample of comparable traditional

loans from Bloomberg Terminal.

We find that shareholders respond positively to announcements of sustainability-linked loan

issuances. Borrowers with better disclosure quality contracts receive a more significant

response than borrowers with poor disclosure quality contracts, implying that investors value

transparency and are vigilant about greenwashing concerns. We conclude that loan spreads

are higher for SLLs at issuance; hence, financial discounts are unlikely to drive the observed

stock market reaction. There are no significant indications of improved ESG performance

between the borrowers of sustainability-linked and traditional loans. Thus, using explicit ESG

information in loan contracts does not seem to affect sustainability performance. However,

borrowers with good ESG profiles seem to self-select into sustainability-linked loans. Our

findings suggest that the borrowers enter sustainability-linked loan contracts to signal ESG

commitment, and their shareholders seem to value this choice.

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