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Payout, debt and takeovers in declining industries

Research output: Working paper

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Payout, debt and takeovers in declining industries. / Myers, S C; Lambrecht, B M.
Lancaster University: The Department of Accounting and Finance, 2004. (Accounting and Finance Working Paper Series).

Research output: Working paper

Harvard

Myers, SC & Lambrecht, BM 2004 'Payout, debt and takeovers in declining industries' Accounting and Finance Working Paper Series, The Department of Accounting and Finance, Lancaster University.

APA

Myers, S. C., & Lambrecht, B. M. (2004). Payout, debt and takeovers in declining industries. (Accounting and Finance Working Paper Series). The Department of Accounting and Finance.

Vancouver

Myers SC, Lambrecht BM. Payout, debt and takeovers in declining industries. Lancaster University: The Department of Accounting and Finance. 2004. (Accounting and Finance Working Paper Series).

Author

Myers, S C ; Lambrecht, B M. / Payout, debt and takeovers in declining industries. Lancaster University : The Department of Accounting and Finance, 2004. (Accounting and Finance Working Paper Series).

Bibtex

@techreport{cfc13aab270e4245b74c0529c75e9400,
title = "Payout, debt and takeovers in declining industries",
abstract = "We present a real-options model of takeovers and investment in declining industries. Managers are assumed to maximize the present value of the cash flows that they can capture from the firm. The managers must pay out a minimum amount of cash to prevent investors from exercising their property rights and taking over the firm. As product demand declines, a first-best abandonment level is reached, where overall value is maximized by shutting down the firm and releasing its capital to investors. Absent takeovers, managers of unlevered firms always wait too long to shut down; they abandon the firm{\textquoteright}s business too late. We model the managers{\textquoteright} payout policy absent takeovers and derive an optimal debt ratio, which enforces first-best abandonment decisions under plausible restrictions on equity issues. We analyze the effects of takeovers of unleveraged or under-leveraged firms. Takeovers by raiders enforce first-best abandonment. Hostile takeovers by other firms occur either at the first-best abandonment point or too early. We also consider management buyouts and mergers of equals and show that in both cases closure happens inefficiently late. JEL Nos.: G34,C72,G13.",
keywords = "firm closure, takeover, real option, managerial incentives, payout policy",
author = "Myers, {S C} and Lambrecht, {B M}",
year = "2004",
language = "English",
series = "Accounting and Finance Working Paper Series",
publisher = "The Department of Accounting and Finance",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "The Department of Accounting and Finance",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Payout, debt and takeovers in declining industries

AU - Myers, S C

AU - Lambrecht, B M

PY - 2004

Y1 - 2004

N2 - We present a real-options model of takeovers and investment in declining industries. Managers are assumed to maximize the present value of the cash flows that they can capture from the firm. The managers must pay out a minimum amount of cash to prevent investors from exercising their property rights and taking over the firm. As product demand declines, a first-best abandonment level is reached, where overall value is maximized by shutting down the firm and releasing its capital to investors. Absent takeovers, managers of unlevered firms always wait too long to shut down; they abandon the firm’s business too late. We model the managers’ payout policy absent takeovers and derive an optimal debt ratio, which enforces first-best abandonment decisions under plausible restrictions on equity issues. We analyze the effects of takeovers of unleveraged or under-leveraged firms. Takeovers by raiders enforce first-best abandonment. Hostile takeovers by other firms occur either at the first-best abandonment point or too early. We also consider management buyouts and mergers of equals and show that in both cases closure happens inefficiently late. JEL Nos.: G34,C72,G13.

AB - We present a real-options model of takeovers and investment in declining industries. Managers are assumed to maximize the present value of the cash flows that they can capture from the firm. The managers must pay out a minimum amount of cash to prevent investors from exercising their property rights and taking over the firm. As product demand declines, a first-best abandonment level is reached, where overall value is maximized by shutting down the firm and releasing its capital to investors. Absent takeovers, managers of unlevered firms always wait too long to shut down; they abandon the firm’s business too late. We model the managers’ payout policy absent takeovers and derive an optimal debt ratio, which enforces first-best abandonment decisions under plausible restrictions on equity issues. We analyze the effects of takeovers of unleveraged or under-leveraged firms. Takeovers by raiders enforce first-best abandonment. Hostile takeovers by other firms occur either at the first-best abandonment point or too early. We also consider management buyouts and mergers of equals and show that in both cases closure happens inefficiently late. JEL Nos.: G34,C72,G13.

KW - firm closure

KW - takeover

KW - real option

KW - managerial incentives

KW - payout policy

M3 - Working paper

T3 - Accounting and Finance Working Paper Series

BT - Payout, debt and takeovers in declining industries

PB - The Department of Accounting and Finance

CY - Lancaster University

ER -