This paper examines whether cooperative banks have different loan terms from commercial banks for corporate loans. Our analysis is based on a unique dataset of around 233,000 corporate loans granted by all French private banks. We find that cooperative banks charge higher rates and require less collateral than commercial banks. However, we show that relationship lending seem to have opposite effects on loan terms depending on the type of bank. Longer relationships reduce interest rates and collateral requirements for cooperative banks, but increase these lending conditions for commercial banks. Furthermore, we find that the beneficial effects of relationship lending for cooperative banks are amplified for financially fragile firms. Our results show that cooperative banks are initially more expensive than commercial banks, but that relationship lending allows them to become cheaper after 20 years of bank-firm relationship.

Mise à jour le 25 Septembre 2025