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Short-Term Termination Without Deterring Long-Term Investment: A Theory of Debt and Buyouts


Alex Edmans


University of Pennsylvania - Finance Department; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER); European Corporate Governance Institute (ECGI)

February 9, 2011

Journal of Financial Economics (JFE), Forthcoming

Abstract:     
The option to terminate a manager early minimizes investor losses if he is unskilled. However, it also deters a skilled manager from undertaking efficient long-term projects that risk low short-term earnings. This paper demonstrates how risky debt can overcome this tension. Leverage concentrates equityholders' stakes, inducing them to learn the cause of low earnings. If they result from investment (poor management), the firm is continued (liquidated). Therefore, unskilled managers are terminated and skilled managers invest without fear of termination. Unlike models of managerial discipline based on total payout, dividends are not a substitute for debt -- they allow for termination upon non-payment, but at the expense of investment since they do not concentrate ownership and induce monitoring. Debt is dynamically consistent as the manager benefits from monitoring. In traditional theories, monitoring constrains the manager; here it frees him to invest.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 42

Keywords: Termination, liquidation, managerial myopia, ownership concentration, monitoring, leverage, private equity

JEL Classification: D82, G32, G33

Accepted Paper Series


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Date posted: June 8, 2006 ; Last revised: December 7, 2011

Suggested Citation

Edmans, Alex, Short-Term Termination Without Deterring Long-Term Investment: A Theory of Debt and Buyouts (February 9, 2011). Journal of Financial Economics (JFE), Forthcoming. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=906331

Contact Information

Alex Edmans (Contact Author)
University of Pennsylvania - Finance Department ( email )
The Wharton School
3620 Locust Walk
Philadelphia, PA 19104
United States

National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)
1050 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02138
United States
European Corporate Governance Institute (ECGI) ( email )
c/o ECARES ULB CP 114
B-1050 Brussels
Belgium
Feedback to SSRN (Beta)


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