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  4. Financial Contract’s Structural Shift Evidenced By An Empirical Exploration Of Textual Credit Agreements

Financial Contract’s Structural Shift Evidenced By An Empirical Exploration Of Textual Credit Agreements

File(s)
Ye_cornell_0058O_11186.pdf (2.39 MB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://doi.org/10.7298/5xtr-v447
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/109701
Collections
Applied Economics and Management MS Theses
Cornell Theses and Dissertations
Author
Ye, Kunkai
Abstract

This research is an empirical exploration of financial contract structure based on data collected from textual credit agreements. Credit agreement, as one of the most common forms of financial contracts, is the contractual agreement usually signed between a lender (in this case a bank) and a borrower (a corporate entity). The study deals with data exploration concerning the structure of credit agreements signed during 1996 – 2005 between banks and large, non-financial companies. Tables of contents in the agreements are converted into a structured dataset for descriptive discussions focusing on time-series patterns or changes. The analysis leads to an intriguing insight indicating the presence of a structural shift regarding the emphasis on specific subjects within a credit agreement, which lays a foundation for future studies regarding changes in contractual relationship overall and economic implication behind.

Description
47 pages
Date Issued
2021-05
Keywords
contract
•
credit agreement
•
data exploration
•
structural shift
Committee Chair
Murfin, Justin
Committee Member
Turvey, Calum G.
Degree Discipline
Applied Economics and Management
Degree Name
M.S., Applied Economics and Management
Degree Level
Master of Science
Type
dissertation or thesis
Link(s) to Catalog Record
https://newcatalog.library.cornell.edu/catalog/15049545

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