N°26-13: Bank Macroprudential Policies and Borrower ESG Performance

AuthorsS. Ongena, J. Cui, M. Haq, E. K. M. Tan
Date2 Feb. 2026
CategoryWorking Papers

We examine the cross-border transmission of macroprudential policies to corporate ESG performance. Constructing a novel measure of U.S. firms' exposure to foreign regulatory shocks through syndicated lending relationships, we employ a triple-difference design that exploits variation across countries, banks, and time. We document significant and economically meaningful spillovers: U.S. borrowers exposed to foreign banks subject to capital or liquidity tightening experience significant declines in ESG performance, whereas exposure to loosening measures leads to ESG improvements. These effects are primarily driven by environmental and governance dimensions. We establish causality using the 2014 European Asset Quality Review as an exogenous regulatory shock, complemented by evidence from the staggered adoption of Basel III and stacked event-study analyses. Overall, our findings highlight an important real consequence of international bank regulation, showing that macroprudential policies can shape corporate sustainability outcomes through global credit markets.