Common Auditors and Private Bank Loans*

Jere R. Francis*, Wei Wang

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

We show that when banks and borrowers share the same audit firm, borrowers receive lower interest rates, after controlling for potentially confounding director connectedness. The common auditor effect is observed only for opaque borrowers, and is greatest when the same audit engagement office audits the bank and borrower. A common auditor connection also matters more for longer‐tenured auditors, for geographically proximate borrowers, and when the syndicate involves fewer lenders. The effect does not hold for auditors recently sanctioned by the PCAOB. Finally, the interest rate discount is not the consequence of homophily or biased decision making, based on a comparison of postloan performance of firms with common auditor loans versus those with noncommon auditor loans.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)793-832
Number of pages40
JournalContemporary Accounting Research
Volume38
Issue number1
Early online date20 Nov 2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Mar 2021

Keywords

  • bank loan pricing
  • common auditor
  • network effects
  • trust
  • information asymmetry
  • LENDING RELATIONSHIPS
  • FIRM TENURE
  • SOCIAL TIES
  • INFORMATION
  • QUALITY
  • CLIENT
  • COST
  • EMBEDDEDNESS
  • MANAGEMENT
  • NETWORKS

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