Creditor Rights and Corporate Risk-Taking
61 Pages Posted: 8 Dec 2009 Last revised: 17 Jul 2024
There are 6 versions of this paper
Creditor Rights and Corporate Risk-Taking
Creditor Rights and Corporate Risk-Taking
Creditor Rights and Corporate Risk-Taking
Creditor Rights and Corporate Risk-Taking
Creditor Rights and Corporate Risk-Taking
Date Written: December 2009
Abstract
We analyze the link between creditor rights and firms' investment policies, proposing that stronger creditor rights in bankruptcy reduce corporate risk-taking. In cross-country analysis, we find that stronger creditor rights induce greater propensity of firms to engage in diversifying acquisitions, which result in poorer operating and stock-market abnormal performance. In countries with strong creditor rights, firms also have lower cash flow risk and lower leverage, and there is greater propensity of firms with low-recovery assets to acquire targets with high-recovery assets. These relationships are strongest in countries where management is dismissed in reorganization, and are observed in time-series analysis around changes in creditor rights. Our results question the value of strong creditor rights as they have an adverse effect on firms by inhibiting management from undertaking risky investments.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Creditor Rights and Corporate Risk-Taking
By Viral V. Acharya, Yakov Amihud, ...
-
Creditor Rights and Corporate Risk-Taking
By Viral V. Acharya, Yakov Amihud, ...
-
Creditor Rights and Corporate Risk-Taking
By Viral V. Acharya, Yakov Amihud, ...
-
Creditor Rights and Corporate Risk-Taking
By Viral V. Acharya, Yakov Amihud, ...
-
Creditor Rights and Corporate Risk-Taking
By Viral V. Acharya, Yakov Amihud, ...
-
Access to Collateral and Corporate Debt Structure: Evidence from a Natural Experiment
By Vikrant Vig
-
Growing Out of Trouble? Corporate Responses to Liability Risk
By Todd A. Gormley and David A. Matsa
-
Bank Finance Versus Bond Finance
By Fiorella De Fiore and Harald Uhlig