The authors explore the determinants of liquidation values of assets, particularly focusing on the potential buyers of assets. When a firm in financial distress needs to sell assets, its industry peers are likely to be experiencing problems themselves, leading to asset sales at prices below value in best use. Such illiquidity makes assets cheap in bad times and so ex ante is a significant private cost of leverage. The authors use this focus on asset buyers to explain variation in debt capacity across industries and over the business cycle, as well as the rise in U.S. corporate leverage in the 1980s. Copyright 1992 by American Finance Association.
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Article provided by American Finance Association in its journal Journal of Finance.
Volume (Year): 47 (1992) Issue (Month): 4 (September) Pages: 1343-66 Download reference. The following formats are available: HTML
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