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Capital structure theories typically assume liquidation values are exogenous even though they may be determined in part by the debt choices of firms in the industry (Shleifer and Vishny, 1992; Pulvino, 1998). We develop a model in which high industry debt leads to a greater supply of assets for sale...
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Firms with lower leverage are not only less likely to experience financial distress but are also better positioned to acquire assets from other distressed firms. With endogenous asset sales and values, each firm's debt choice then depends on the choices of its industry peers. With indivisible...
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In our model, self-interested agents prefer to buy from local neighbors rather than from cheaper outside vendors even in the absence of memory and coordination mechanisms. All they know is who is a local neighbor. Buyers voluntarily pay rents because they internalize that their neighbors will be...
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This paper explains why seemingly irrational overconfident behavior can persist. Information aggregation is poor in groups in which most individuals herd. By ignoring the herd, the actions of overconfident individuals ("entrepreneurs") convey their private information. However, entrepreneurs...
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