CORPORATIONS Creditors November 28, 2006 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 38
About This Presentation
Title:

CORPORATIONS Creditors November 28, 2006

Description:

The previous lectures emphasized the efficiency and optimality of the form of ... adopted a custom of breaking (rupto) the selling stall (banco)of a defaulting ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:33
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 39
Provided by: robertb84
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: CORPORATIONS Creditors November 28, 2006


1
CORPORATIONS CreditorsNovember 28, 2006
2
CORPORATIONS Creditors
Set of Cost Minimizers
Set of Profit Maximizers
3
CORPORATIONS Creditors
4
CORPORATIONS Creditors Firm Size
  • The previous lectures emphasized the efficiency
    and optimality of the form of business that a
    firm might adopt.
  • For example, sole proprietorships carry the most
    flexibility, in the extreme, but sacrifice
  • the advantages of distributing the risks of long
    term investment over many individuals,
  • the economies of scale and
  • specialization offered by incorporating the firm.

5
CORPORATIONS Creditors Firm Size
  • V

Sole Shareholder Corporation
Vs E
Us Fs
F
6
CORPORATIONS Creditors Firm Size
V
Expansion Path of Firm at agency costs
0 Expansion path with optimal mix of credit and
equity
F
7
CORPORATIONSCreditors Firm Size
  • V

Point where corporation becomes too big for owner
and owner can start buying additional needs on
the open market EBoundary
Vs E
Us Equity Expansion
Path Fs
Slope -1
F
8
CORPORATIONS Creditors Firm Size
V
Expansion Path of Firm at agency costs
0 Expansion Path of Firm at agency costs A
Agency costs A
E
Slope -1 Slope -a
F
9
CORPORATIONS Creditors Firm Size
V
Expansion Path of Firm at agency costs
0 Expansion path with optimal mix of credit and
equity Expansion Path of Firm at agency costs A
Agency costs A
E
F
10
CORPORATIONS Creditors
11
CORPORATIONS Creditors Insider Trading
  • In the previous lectures, the two major
    investors in the firm were insiders and
    outsiders

12
CORPORATIONS Creditors Insider Trading
V
Utility Curve of Insider Insider Trading
Restricted Utility Curve of Insider
Insider Trading
Unrestricted
Slope -1 Slope -a
F
13
CORPORATIONS Creditors Insider Trading
V
Impact of manager shareholder on outside
shareholders
Vs E
E Us Fs
F
14
CORPORATIONS Creditors
15
CORPORATIONS Creditors
  • Now what happens when one introduces a third
    party the lender or creditor?

16
CORPORATIONS Creditors
  • .

Banks Debentures Bonds
17
CORPORATIONS Creditors
  • Why can the failure of the entrepreneur or
    manager to maximize the value of the firm be
    perfectly consistent with efficiency?
  • Why is the sale of common stock a viable source
    of capital even though managers do not maximize
    the value of the firm?
  • Why is debt relied upon as a source of capital
    before debt financing irregardless of tax
    advantages?
  • Why do companies issue preferred stock?

18
CORPORATIONS Creditors
  • Modigliani and Miller (1958) argued that in the
    absence of bankruptcy costs and tax subsidies on
    the payment of interest, the value of the firm is
    independent of the financial structure.
  • Modigliani and Miller later (1963) argued that
    the existence of tax subsidies on interest
    payments would cause the value of the firm to
    rise with the amount of debt financing by the
    amount of the capitalized value of the tax
    subsidy.
  • This line of argument implies that the firm
    should be financed almost entirely with debt.

19
CORPORATIONS Creditors
  • Jensen and Meckling argue that as long as the
    "agency cost of debt financing (issuing bonds to
    creditors) remains below the "agency cost" of
    equity, then more debt is optimal.
  • The optimality of expanding debt for the firm
    ceases when the two types of "agency costs"
    become equal.
  • Jensen and Meckling at 339-340

20
CORPORATIONS Creditors
21
CORPORATIONS Creditors Limited Liability
  • Limited liability is a form of insurance to the
    shareholders.
  • A firm is hit with a sudden downturn, or worse,
    an unforeseeable catastrophe, like Bhopal, India,
    in 1984, that causes the firm's liability to
    greatly exceed the total investment the
    shareholders made in the firm.
  • Limited liability is a rule of law that attaches
    to the corporate firm of business association.

22
CORPORATIONS Creditors Limited Liability
  • Imperfect Information
  • Decreasing Marginal Costs Due to Precaution
  • Increasing Marginal Costs Due To Production

C1
Strict Liability Rule MC1 Contracted Liability
Rule MC1 Expected Liability MC1
a1
23
CORPORATIONS Creditors Limited Liability
  • Limited liability insures total liability to the
    shareholders will not exceed their total
    investment.
  • Such a rule does not attach to sole proprietors
    or partners.
  • In those firms total liability not only may
    exceed the investment, but may attach to the
    personal assets of the investors.

24
CORPORATIONS Creditors Limited Liability
  • Imperfect Information
  • Decreasing Marginal Costs Due to Precaution
  • Increasing Marginal Costs Due To Production

C1
Limited Liability Rule Expected Liability
MC1
a1
25
CORPORATIONS Creditors Limited Liability
  • Imperfect Information
  • New Expectation Damages Rule Subject To The
    Limited Liability Rule

C1
Limited Liability Rule
a1
26
CORPORATIONS Creditors Limited Liability
  • As with other forms of insurance, limited
    liability poses a "pooling problem".
  • Pooling equilibria" emerge where different agents
    are expected to perform the same action under the
    same law.
  • Different agents will do different actions,
    although they may "strategically" change their
    behaviour to act more uniformly.
  • The group that performs below expectation commit
    a "moral hazard".

27
CORPORATIONS Creditors Limited Liability
  • The agency costs of unlimited liability would be
    much higher than simply paying a premium in the
    form of higher interest rates to the creditors of
    the corporation in return for their acceptance of
    a contract which grants limited liability to the
    shareholders.
  • The creditors would then bear the risk of any
    non-payment of debts in the event of the
    corporations bankruptcy. (Jensen and Meckling,
    p. 331)

28
CORPORATIONS Creditors Limited Liability
  • Limited liability does not mean that every firm
    will take irrational risks, but some might.
  • In these cases, limited liability, like other
    forms of insurance creates moral hazards.
  • The most frequently discussed moral hazard of
    limited liability is bankruptcy.

29
CORPORATIONS Creditors
30
CORPORATIONS Creditors Liability Rules
  • At common law, suits by creditors against debtors
    for unpaid debts were technically complex, drawn
    out and expensive.
  • Those businesses that needed their money quickly
    sought other remedies, through their guilds,
    trade fairs or private "for hire" enforcers.

31
Banks Debentures Bonds
Revenue Canada, Judgments
Employees, Suppliers
32
CORPORATIONS Creditors Liability Rules
  • In Italy, lenders adopted a custom of breaking
    (rupto) the selling stall (banco)of a defaulting
    debtor so that customers would know to pay the
    lenders directly instead of the debtor

33
CORPORATIONS Creditors Liability Rules
  • The agency cost of debt financing appreciates
    significantly when the firm does not have
    sufficient net worth to pay all classes of
    creditors.
  • The probability and cost of potential bankruptcy
    adversely effects the value of the firm.

34
CORPORATIONS Creditors Liability Rules
  • Another drawback of bankruptcy is its finality.
    Bankruptcy kills the business.
  • In an economy without a relatively costless
    bankruptcy procedure, competing creditors might
    seize assets critical to the corporation's
    operation and worsen an already suboptimal
    situation

35
CORPORATIONS Creditors Liability Rules
  • What would be the main motivation for this kind
    of legislation?
  • Difficulties of recontracting debts at common law
  • Foakes v. Beer
  • Gilbert Steel
  • Prisoners Dilemna The Uncooperative Game
  • Without the prioritization or hierarchy of
    creditors, there is a suboptimal Nash
    equilibrium

36
CORPORATIONS Creditors Liability Rules
  • The common law also recognized the right of
    lenders to "contract" their own remedies in the
    agreement that accompanied the loan.
  • Usually such agreements provided that legal title
    to the firm's assets be transferred to the lender
    for the duration of the loan.
  • Railways and large manufacturing concerns were
    frequently controlled in this matter. Such
    lenders are treated as "secured lenders" with the
    highest priority over other creditors.

37
CORPORATIONS Creditors Liability Rules
  • In the 1930s, both Canada and the United States
    passed legislation that enabled corporations to
    request breathing space to freeze creditor
    action while reorganization
  • United States Chapter 11
  • Canada Corporation Creditors Arrangement Act

38
CORPORATIONS Creditors Liability Rules
  • Stelco case latest in a long line of cases that
    included
  • Eatons
  • Consumers Distributors
  • Dylex
  • Many others
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com