Why Do Firms Pay Different Interest Rates on Their Bank Loans?
Working Paper 34870
DOI 10.3386/w34870
Issue Date
We document significant variation in interest rates among similar commercial and industrial loans using confidential supervisory data on the largest US banks. This dispersion does not appear to be due to risk. We rationalize the data using a search cost model and find that search costs are highest for smaller and riskier borrowers and lower for public firms, consistent with predictable differences in the costs of screening and monitoring. We find that search costs are substantial. Over a third of firms behave as if they do not comparison shop; half of all firms appear to only obtain two quotes before picking a lender, while the remaining firms behave as if they search widely.
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Copy CitationMary Amiti, Anil K Kashyap, Anna Kovner, and David Weinstein, "Why Do Firms Pay Different Interest Rates on Their Bank Loans?," NBER Working Paper 34870 (2026), https://doi.org/10.3386/w34870.Download Citation