Bankruptcy as a deliberate strategy: Theoretical considerations and empirical evidence
Bankruptcy and bankruptcy reorganizations have been identified as remedies for financial distress, but there is little agreement on their value to firms, managers, and the general economy. This paper provides a brief review of proposed bankruptcy strategies and some alternative views about their cos...
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sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-49752014-08-01T01:36:20Z Bankruptcy as a deliberate strategy: Theoretical considerations and empirical evidence Moulton, W. N. Thomas, Howard Bankruptcy and bankruptcy reorganizations have been identified as remedies for financial distress, but there is little agreement on their value to firms, managers, and the general economy. This paper provides a brief review of proposed bankruptcy strategies and some alternative views about their costs and benefits followed by an empirical study of the outcomes of 73 bankruptcies and subsequent reorganization efforts. The evidence suggests that there are few successful reorganizations, bankruptcy is a costly response to financial distress, and managerial choice in bankrupt firms is highly constrained by forces external to the firm. The diversity of stakeholder interests limits the value of global judgements about success or failure of bankruptcy strategies. Firm size dominates all other factors in predicting success in completing the reorganization process. Delayed filings primarily reflect failed efforts to avoid bankruptcy, not deliberate strategies. Reasons for the use of bankruptcy in spite of its high costs are discussed. 1993-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/3976 info:doi/10.1002/smj.4250140204 Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Bankruptcy business failure financial distress reorganization Strategic Management Policy |
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Bankruptcy business failure financial distress reorganization Strategic Management Policy Moulton, W. N. Thomas, Howard Bankruptcy as a deliberate strategy: Theoretical considerations and empirical evidence |
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Bankruptcy and bankruptcy reorganizations have been identified as remedies for financial distress, but there is little agreement on their value to firms, managers, and the general economy. This paper provides a brief review of proposed bankruptcy strategies and some alternative views about their costs and benefits followed by an empirical study of the outcomes of 73 bankruptcies and subsequent reorganization efforts. The evidence suggests that there are few successful reorganizations, bankruptcy is a costly response to financial distress, and managerial choice in bankrupt firms is highly constrained by forces external to the firm. The diversity of stakeholder interests limits the value of global judgements about success or failure of bankruptcy strategies. Firm size dominates all other factors in predicting success in completing the reorganization process. Delayed filings primarily reflect failed efforts to avoid bankruptcy, not deliberate strategies. Reasons for the use of bankruptcy in spite of its high costs are discussed. |
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text |
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Moulton, W. N. Thomas, Howard |
author_facet |
Moulton, W. N. Thomas, Howard |
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Moulton, W. N. |
title |
Bankruptcy as a deliberate strategy: Theoretical considerations and empirical evidence |
title_short |
Bankruptcy as a deliberate strategy: Theoretical considerations and empirical evidence |
title_full |
Bankruptcy as a deliberate strategy: Theoretical considerations and empirical evidence |
title_fullStr |
Bankruptcy as a deliberate strategy: Theoretical considerations and empirical evidence |
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Bankruptcy as a deliberate strategy: Theoretical considerations and empirical evidence |
title_sort |
bankruptcy as a deliberate strategy: theoretical considerations and empirical evidence |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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1993 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/3976 |
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1770571988906016768 |