The purpose of this paper is to examine the influence of cybersecurity legislation on corporate debt default risk and its underlying mechanism.
This study investigates the potential of China's Cybersecurity Law (CSL) to affect corporate debt default risk using the Differences-in-Differences method with the sample of listed firms in China from 2011 to 2022.
(1) CSL effectively mitigates debt default risk. (2) CSL significantly decreases debt default risk by reducing operational risk, alleviating financing constraints and agency costs. (3) Firms that are not state-owned and have weaker internal governance and external supervision exhibit a strengthened negative association between CSL and debt default risk.
This paper validates the impact of CSL on corporate debt default risk. In addition, it is recommended that corporate managers should continuously strengthen cybersecurity awareness and response capabilities to effectively mitigate corporate debt default risks. For investors, it is imperative to accord significant attention to the cybersecurity risks of firms during the investment process. And for policymakers, it underscores the necessity to develop and refine corporate cybersecurity institutional standards and frameworks governing corporate information security.
This study demonstrates cybersecurity's risk-mitigation capacity in emerging market debt markets and advances the debt default risk literature by identifying cybersecurity regulation as an underexplored determinant. In addition, this study provides implications for strengthening corporate managers' cybersecurity awareness and enhancing the implementation and refinement of cybersecurity regulations.
