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We investigate the functioning of internal capital markets in Indian Business Groups. We document that intra-group loans are an important means of transferring cash across group firms and that such transfers are typically used to support the financially weaker firms. Groups significantly...
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We investigate the importance of reputation-based implicit contracts in firm financing in the context of Indian Business Groups. The group structure enables us to cleanly analyze the negative spillovers on other firms, triggered by a member firm defaulting on its debt obligations. We hypothesize...
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We hypothesize that public firms that create novel innovations rely more on arm's length financing (equity and public debt) than on relationship based bank financing. A primary reason is that banks, unable to evaluate novel technologies, will tend to discourage investing in innovative projects...
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This paper argues that the organization of an internal capital market can influence an affiliated firm's dividend policy. The intuition is developed in a model in which business groups -- several independent firms owned and controlled by a family -- operate an internal capital market that uses...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012714791
We argue that powerful CEOs induce their boards to shift the weight on performance measures towards the better performing measures, thereby rigging the incentive part of their pay. The intuition is developed in a simple model in which some powerful CEOs exploit superior information and lack of...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012727442