Section 12 Flashcards

1
Q

what is bankruptcy caused by?

A

insufficient cash flow to meet obligations. size of firms cash flow may depend on things outside of the firms control, like macroeconomic conditions, but firm choose amount of debt in capital strucutre and investment projects - which are under their control

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2
Q

if bankruptcy is viewed as exogenous, how does the procedure play out in relation to management?

A

will leave management in place and, may even protect management

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3
Q

if bankruptcy is viewed as the result of managers actions, how does the procedure treat them?

A

tend to remove incumbent equity holders and management

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4
Q

why is bankruptcy code important?

A

legal procedure determines relative bargaining power of various claimants to firm; important for security pricing and design because they affect security value (different rules and procedures affect how much firm value is allocated to different security classes)

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5
Q

why does debt exist?

A

serves to control the equity holders/managements. if they perform badly, it loses control to creditors. how and when this happens depends on bankruptcy procedure. bankruptcy code should be more creditor-oriented procredure

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6
Q

optimal bankruptcy rules preserve..?

A

going-concern value, but don’t entrench managers or equity holders. provide balance between exogenous and endogenous factors

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7
Q

if the bankruptcy rules aren’t designed well, what can happen?

A

one party or another can take advatnage of rules strategically to transfer value to themselves at the expense of others (Strategic bankruptcy filing)

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8
Q

in the mid 1970’s the US Congress passed?

A

Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978

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9
Q

What did the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978 do?

A

easier for managers to invoke bankruptcy protection. Doesn’t require debtor actually be insolvent in order to file protection from creditors.

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10
Q

Passage of the 1978 act led to what?

A

large increase in voluntary bankruptcy filings. Before filing, ten filings per day. after the first year it was passed, 16 per day. increase wasn’t explainable by economic circumstances

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11
Q

prior to the act what was the relationship between filings and economic activity?

A

more filings were associated with recessions

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12
Q

after the act of 1978 what happened to the historical relationship?

A

no such association. act benefited a specific group by creating strategic option for one group

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13
Q

in the pre-1978 act era vs post, describe impacts to stockholders?

A

in pre-act era, stockholders lost more than 50 cents per dollar, but in post act period, they lost almost everything (per dollar); average dollar loss is almost 3x greater after the fact; about $14Bn more was lost after the act for roughl the same number of firms

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14
Q

if Bond and stockholders losses were greater after the passage of the act, why did number of filings increase?

A

managers may have benefited. survival rate of firms went from 74% to 84%

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15
Q

the transfer of control from equity holders to bond holders that is supposed to occur when a firm becomes insolvent is governed by?

A

bankruptcy procedures. they regulate the transfer, but create strategic possibilities for various parties including managers

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16
Q

The firm is viewed as a nexus of contracts between?

A

economic players

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17
Q

what are the three types of economic players?

A

manager, equity holder, and debt holder

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18
Q

In the agency literature, who’s the manager?

A

the agent

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19
Q

in the agency literature, who’s the investors (equity and debt)?

A

principal

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20
Q

from a legal perspective, shareholders are or are not owners of the firm?

A

are owners

21
Q

from a legal perspective, mangers may also be owners of firm?

A

may also be partial owners when they own stock in the firm

22
Q

what’s the key assumption in the agency literature regarding each agents and their payoff?

A

each agent only maximizes their own payoff

23
Q

should a firm never invest in a project with a negative beta?

A

no - a project with negative beta (has higher return than the CAPM return of a same beta portfolio) should be considered.

24
Q

why are assets with negative beta valuable?

A

they reduce portfolio variance

25
Q

In the presence of agency conflict, who dominates debt between creditors and equity holders?

A

equity

26
Q

when the entrepreneur sells equity, he bears the full cost of effort but only receives…?

A

a fraction of the output

27
Q

The more outside equity, the more severe is the..?

A

inefficient production problem, thus the lower value of the firm

28
Q

what can solve the underproduction problem partially?

A

debt finance

29
Q

describe chapter 7 liquidation

A

trustee is appointed to oversee the liquidation of the firms assets through an auction. proceeds are used to pay firms creditors and firm ceases to exist

30
Q

describe chapter 11 reorganization

A

firm files for bankruptcy protection and all pending collection attempts are automatically suspended in (AUTOMATIC STAY). management continues operations and is given 120 days to propose reorganization plan, specifying treatment of each creditor of firm.

31
Q

what are direct costs of bankruptcy?

A

out of pocket costs associated with defaulting on obligations in debts, and going through court supervised bankruptcy process. things like court, lawyer, accountant, and investment banking fees. studies show roughly 3%-4% of asset values in costs

32
Q

what are indirect costs of bankruptcy?

A

loss of customers that value post sale services, loss of willing suppliers, difficulty retaining and recruiting employees, forced sales of assets and reduced prices. sometimes can almost 20% of firm value (Estimate)

33
Q

what are agency costs?

A

losses in value associated with having an agent with different interests work on behalf of the principals, or owners.

34
Q

of all the different imperfections that drive capital structure, the most significant is likely to be..?

A

taxes: interest tax shield allows firms to repay investors and avoid corporate tax

35
Q

firms must balance the tax benefits of debt with..?

A

costs of financial distress

36
Q

agency costs and benefits of leverage are also important determinants of…? and why..?

A

capital structure. too much debt can motivate managers and equity holders to take excessive risks or underinvest in a firm. when free cash flows are high, too little leverage may encourage wasteful spending

37
Q

define default

A

when firm fails to make required interest or principal payments on debt

38
Q

define bankruptcy

A

court supervised reorganization of firms financial claims governed by 1978 reform act

39
Q

define trade-off theory

A

theory attempts to explain how firms should choose capital structure that maximizes value of the firm. theory believes total value of leveraged firm equals value of firm without leverage plus the present value of the tax savings from debt, less present value of financial distress costs, plus present value of agency benefits of debt

40
Q

define asset substitution problem

A

when shareholders can gain by making negative NPV investments or decisions that sufficiently increase the firms risk

41
Q

define debt overhang

A

when a firm may be unable to finance new, positive NPV projects because it faces financial distress

42
Q

define free cash flow hypothesis

A

view that wasteful spending is more likely to occur when firms have high levels of free cash flow, or cash flow in excess of what is needed after making all positive npv investments and payments to debt holders. Under hyptohesis, leverage may increase firm value by reducing wasteful investment by managers because it commits the firm to making future interest payments reducing excess cash flow

43
Q

define management entrenchment

A

view that managers care most about keeping their jobs, and they are more likely to engage in wasteful investment when their postiion within the firm is secure. increasing leverage and the risk of distress may help control wasteful investment

44
Q

define asymmetric information

A

managers information about firm’s level of risk and future cash flows is superior to outside investors.

45
Q

define adverse selection

A

buyers will tend to discount price they are willing to pay for good when there is assymetric information - seller has private info about value of good. likely markets will contain low quality goods. investors discount price they’re willing to pay for securities if there’s asymmetric information

46
Q

define moral hazard

A

idea that individuals change their behavior if they are not fully exposed to consequences

47
Q

define signaling theory of debt

A

in the presence of asymmetric information, idea that firms can use high leverage as way to signal investors that they are undervalued. signal may be too costly for lower valued firms to send because will lead to higher expected costs of financial distress

48
Q

define pecking order hypothesis

A

idea that in the presence of asymmetric information and likelihood of percieved adverse selection, managers will choose to issue safest security they can and only issue new equity as last resort. in this theory, firms raising capital prefer using retained earnings, and then turn to debt before equity to avoid market perceiving them as being overvalued - attempting to issue overvalued securities.