Do Debt Covenants Constrain Borrowings Prior to Violation? Evidence from SFAS 160
Posted: 12 Jul 2012 Last revised: 19 Apr 2019
Date Written: June 12, 2018
Abstract
Prior evidence shows a reduction in leverage after covenant violations, but we do not know whether covenants affect leverage before they are violated. In this study, we use an exogenous accounting-based shock to debt covenants that relaxed covenant tightness (SFAS 160) and examine whether covenants constrain leverage for borrowers that are close to violation, even when the borrower is financially healthy. We find that SFAS 160 increased debt levels in firms that were close to violation. This increase in debt was driven by financially healthy firms, suggesting that the likelihood of future covenant violations could impede borrowing by firms. We also find an increase in investment sensitivity to Q after SFAS 160 in firms close to violation, suggesting the additional debt was used to make legitimate investments. Because SFAS 160 was passed in the midst of the financial crisis, it is difficult to generalize our findings to more normal financial periods.
Keywords: Debt, covenants, financial constraints, leverage, investments, default
JEL Classification: G01, G30, G31, G33, M21, M41
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
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