Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Cutting Borrowing Costs for Corporates

 

Global Debt Landscape: Cutting Borrowing Costs for Corporates

R Kannan

Introduction

Access to affordable finance is central to a firm's ability to invest, grow, and create jobs globally. However, businesses in low- and middle-income countries consistently face much steeper borrowing costs than advanced economies. This IFC report examines over three decades of global bond issuances to identify how these costs can be curbed. By understanding these market dynamics, corporate leaders can make highly strategic financing decisions to unlock vital growth capital.

Observations from the Report

Dataset Scale and Scope

The comprehensive global analysis spans 35 years of data up to the year 2024. It evaluates more than 330,000 individual bond issues across domestic and international debt markets. The data covers over 50,000 distinct companies operating around the world. A total of 87 low- and middle-income countries alongside 51 high-income nations are represented.

Persistent Income-Group Yield Gap

Firms in low- and middle-income countries face a persistent financing disadvantage compared to wealthier nations. From 2015 to 2024, median corporate borrowing costs were structurally higher in developing markets. The gap between these regions reached 2 percentage points in inflation-adjusted real terms. When evaluated in nominal interest rates, the corresponding corporate borrowing gap expands to 2.7 percentage points.

International Integration and Openness

Lifting regulatory barriers to foreign investment serves as an effective mechanism to expand available capital. Open economies experience an increase in the number of local firms raising money via bonds. Financial integration reduces corporate borrowing costs for bonds issued in international markets. This compression lowers international yields by approximately 1.2 percentage points for participating enterprises.

Domestic Pension System Reforms

Domestic pension reforms that create privately managed retirement accounts substantially build local savings pools. These accumulated funds provide domestic corporate bond markets with a steady supply of investable capital. The resulting increase in funding supply reduced domestic corporate bond yields by about 1.5 percentage points. Applying these reforms to 34 countries with small pension markets could save billions in interest.

Sovereign Yield Pass-Through Dynamics

Sound public finance management directly benefits private enterprises by improving overall borrowing conditions. A one-percentage-point decline in a nation's sovereign bond yield triggers a significant domestic corporate drop. Domestic corporate bond yields decrease by 76 basis points following this government improvement. International corporate yields simultaneously experience a corresponding decline of 46 basis points.

Insulation from Global Policy Shocks

Developing deep domestic bond markets insulates local companies from volatile external global capital shocks. A one percentage point increase in the U.S. federal funds rate harms international borrowing heavily. It is associated with a 47 basis point spike in corporate interest rates internationally. Conversely, borrowing in domestic markets experiences a mild increase of only 10 basis points.

Within-Country Yield Dispersion

High corporate borrowing costs are not distributed uniformly within developing market economic environments. A wide dispersion and significant overlap exist across different tiers of corporate issuers. Even within the same country and currency, the typical internal spread is 1.6 percentage points. This internal variation between low- and high-cost borrowers is nearly as large as the international gap.

Firm Size as a Credit Signal

Firm scale acts as a primary signal to alleviate investor credit risk concerns. Larger companies successfully secure lower borrowing costs due to their operational scale and diversification. Moving from the 25th to the 75th percentile of size lowers domestic yields by 78 basis points. The identical change in scale provides a 56 basis point discount in international markets.

State Ownership Pricing Advantages

Company ownership structures exert a strong, measurable influence on final primary market bond pricing. State-owned enterprises pay lower interest rates because investors price in implicit government backing. For domestic issuances in developing countries, state-owned enterprises save 50 basis points over private firms. This public sector discount remains active in international markets at 37 basis points.

Multinational Subsidiary Benefits

Subsidiaries of multinational corporations enjoy a distinct pricing advantage when accessing capital markets. Investors are reassured by the high likelihood of corporate parent support during financial distress. In domestic low- and middle-income markets, subsidiary status lowers yields by 31 basis points. A highly similar discount is observed for multinational subsidiaries operating inside high-income countries.

Public Listing Transparency Premium

Regulatory corporate transparency is highly valued by investors who demand standardized financial data. Unlisted firms face a substantial information penalty when attempting to access international debt markets. An unlisted corporate issuer pays 84 basis points more than a publicly listed competitor. In domestic markets, formal listings matter less because local investors rely on relationship networks.

Maturity Risk Penalties

Bond maturity choices dictate borrowing terms because future macroeconomic conditions remain highly unpredictable. Longer-term contract structures systematically carry higher interest rates due to elevated maturity risk. Each additional year added to a bond's maturity increases domestic yields by 14 basis points. International bond issuances face a maturity penalty of 10 basis points per additional year.

Surge in Local-Currency Borrowing

Local-currency financing has experienced a dramatic structural ascent across developing nations since the 1990s. The local-currency share of corporate bond issuance in these countries was under 30 percent initially. By the year 2024, this domestic segment skyrocketed to comprise almost 90 percent of issuances. This shift establishes local currency as the dominant framework for current emerging market corporate borrowing.

Global Drivers of Hard-Currency Yields

Variance decomposition reveals that global factors heavily drive dollar-denominated corporate bond yields. Year-specific global forces explain a large and identical slice of corporate yield variation everywhere. These macroeconomic global factors account for 28 percent of total variance in low-income nations. High-income countries see the exact same 28 percent variance driven by these global forces.

Domestic Drivers of Local-Currency Yields

Local-currency corporate yields depend far more heavily on specific domestic developments than global cycles. Country-by-year factors represent the single largest driver of local bond yield variance in developing nations. These domestic conditions account for 33 percent of the corporate yield variance in low-income countries. In comparison, country-by-year factors explain only 18 percent of local yield variance within advanced economies.

International Leverage Penalties

Corporate balance sheet leverage metrics directly alter investor risk pricing across global debt platforms. Highly indebted corporate entities face penalizing interest rate structures when issuing bonds internationally. Moving from the 25th to the 75th percentile of leverage adds 54 basis points for developing firms. Advanced economy corporate issuers face a milder leverage penalty of 35 basis points internationally.

Compositional Effects on the Yield Gap

The structural yield gap between advanced and developing markets is driven partly by observable parameters. Accounting for specific firm composition and bond contract designs narrows the international yield divide. Including these firm-level characteristics reduces the measured high-to-low income country gap by one-quarter. Adding the country's annual economic growth rate explains up to one-third of the total spread.

Lessons for Corporates

Optimize Organizational Scale to Reduce Risk Signals

  • Firm scale acts as a primary signal to alleviate investor credit risk concerns.
  • Larger companies successfully secure lower borrowing costs due to operational diversification.
  • Moving from the 25th to the 75th percentile of size lowers domestic yields by 78 basis points.
  • The identical change in scale provides a 56 basis point discount in international markets.

Prioritize Transparency Through Public Stock Listings

  • Regulatory corporate transparency is highly valued by investors who demand standardized data.
  • Unlisted firms face a substantial information penalty when attempting to access international debt markets.
  • An unlisted corporate issuer pays 84 basis points more than a publicly listed competitor.
  • In domestic markets, formal listings matter less because local investors rely on relationship networks.

Manage Balance Sheet Leverage to Limit Yield Penalties

  • Corporate balance sheet leverage metrics directly alter investor risk pricing across debt platforms.
  • Highly indebted corporate entities face penalizing interest rate structures when issuing bonds.
  • Moving from the 25th to the 75th percentile of leverage adds 54 basis points for developing firms.
  • Advanced economy corporate issuers face a milder leverage penalty of 35 basis points internationally.

Leverage Domestic Markets to Insulate Against Global Shocks

  • Developing deep domestic bond markets insulates local companies from volatile external capital shocks.
  • A one percentage point increase in the U.S. federal funds rate harms international borrowing heavily.
  • This global rate hike is associated with a 47 basis point spike in corporate interest rates internationally.
  • Conversely, borrowing in domestic markets experiences a mild increase of only 10 basis points.

Weigh the Cost-Benefit Tradeoffs of Maturity Terms

  • Bond maturity choices dictate borrowing terms because future economic conditions remain unpredictable.
  • Longer-term contract structures systematically carry higher interest rates due to elevated maturity risk.
  • Each additional year added to a bond's maturity increases domestic yields by 14 basis points.
  • International bond issuances face a maturity penalty of 10 basis points per additional year.

Capitalize on the Structural Ascent of Local Currencies

  • Local-currency financing has experienced a dramatic structural ascent across developing nations.
  • The local-currency share of corporate bond issuance in these countries was under 30 percent initially.
  • By the year 2024, this domestic segment skyrocketed to comprise almost 90 percent of issuances.
  • This shift establishes local currency as the dominant framework for current emerging market borrowing.

Maximize the Strategic Pricing Advantages of State Ownership

  • Company ownership structures exert a strong, measurable influence on final primary market bond pricing.
  • State-owned enterprises pay lower interest rates because investors price in implicit government backing.
  • For domestic issuances in developing countries, state-owned enterprises save 50 basis points over private firms.
  • This public sector discount remains active in international markets at 37 basis points.

Harness Global Capital Openness to Compress Foreign Yields

  • Lifting regulatory barriers to foreign investment serves as an effective mechanism to expand capital.
  • Open economies experience an increase in the number of local firms raising money via bonds.
  • Financial integration reduces corporate borrowing costs for bonds issued in international markets.
  • This compression lowers international yields by approximately 1.2 percentage points for enterprises.

Capture Multinational Subsidiary Funding Efficiencies

  • Subsidiaries of multinational corporations enjoy a distinct pricing advantage when accessing capital markets.
  • Investors are reassured by the high likelihood of corporate parent support during financial distress.
  • In domestic low- and middle-income markets, subsidiary status lowers yields by 31 basis points.
  • A highly similar discount is observed for multinational subsidiaries operating inside high-income countries.

Track Domestic Indicators for Local Currency Issuances

  • Local-currency corporate yields depend far more heavily on specific domestic developments than global cycles.
  • Country-by-year factors represent the single largest driver of local bond yield variance in developing nations.
  • These domestic conditions account for 33 percent of the corporate yield variance in low-income countries.
  • In comparison, country-by-year factors explain only 18 percent of local yield variance within advanced economies.

Anticipate Sovereign Performance Pass-Through Effects

  • Sound public finance management directly benefits private enterprises by improving borrowing conditions.
  • A one-percentage-point decline in a nation's sovereign bond yield triggers a corporate drop.
  • Domestic corporate bond yields decrease by 76 basis points following this government improvement.
  • International corporate yields simultaneously experience a corresponding decline of 46 basis points.

Anchor Financial Planning Around Macro-Yield Variance

  • Variance decomposition reveals that global factors heavily drive dollar-denominated corporate bond yields.
  • Year-specific global forces explain a large and identical slice of corporate yield variation everywhere.
  • These macroeconomic global factors account for 28 percent of total variance in low-income nations.
  • High-income countries see the exact same 28 percent variance driven by these global forces.

Conclusion

Lowering the cost of corporate debt requires a comprehensive mix of corporate strategy and policy reforms. While firms can successfully navigate market variations by improving operational scale, building transparency, and leveraging domestic currencies, overall market health relies heavily on broader domestic and global developments. When companies align their funding strategies with these economic realities, they position themselves to better withstand macroeconomic shocks. Ultimately, securing affordable capital allows private businesses to expand capacity, innovate, and drive sustainable employment growth.