Do Bankruptcy Codes Matter? A Study of Defaults in France, Germany and the UK
EFA 2005 Moscow Meetings Paper
ECGI - Finance Working Paper No. 89/2005
WFA 2005 Portland Meetings Paper
45 Pages Posted: 5 Jan 2005
Date Written: September 2006
Abstract
Using a large sample of small-to-medium size firms that defaulted on their bank debt in France, Germany, and the UK, we find that large differences in creditors' rights across countries lead banks to adjust their lending and reorganization practices to mitigate the expected creditor-unfriendly aspects of the bankruptcy law. In particular, French banks respond to a creditor-unfriendly code by requiring more collateral than lenders elsewhere, and by relying on particular collateral forms that minimize the statutory dilution of their claims in bankruptcy. Despite such adjustments, bank recovery rates in default remain sharply different across the three countries, reflecting different levels of creditor protection. Notwithstanding the high level of creditor protection and low expected losses from default, pre-distress loan spreads in the UK are not lower than elsewhere. We conclude that, despite significant adjustments in lending practices, bankruptcy codes still sharply affect default outcomes.
Keywords: Recovery rate, Default, Reorganization, Bankruptcy code
JEL Classification: G21, G30, G33
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Debt Enforcement Around the World
By Simeon Djankov, Oliver Hart, ...
-
Debt Enforcement Around the World
By Simeon Djankov, Oliver Hart, ...
-
By Arturo Bris, Ivo Welch, ...
-
By Stuart C. Gilson, Edith S. Hotchkiss, ...
-
By Lawrence A. Weiss and Karen H. Wruck
-
Asset Efficiency and Reallocation Decisions of Bankrupt Firms
-
Bankruptcy Around the World: Explanations of its Relative Use
By Stijn Claessens and Leora F. Klapper
-
Vulture Investors and the Market for Control of Distressed Firms