Hold-Up, Stakeholders, and Takeover Threats
- 1 January 2004
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
We analyze the impact of takeover threats on long term relationships between the target owners and other stakeholders. In the absence of takeovers, stakeholders' bargaining power increases their incentive to invest but reduces the owners' incentive to invest. The threat of a takeover that would transfer value from the stakeholders reduces their ex ante investment. However, the stakeholders may appropriate ex post some value created by a takeover. This can prevent some value-enhancing takeovers. We examine extensions to the disciplinary role of takeovers, takeover defence mechanisms, and trade credit, and discuss empirical predictions.Keywords
This publication has 43 references indexed in Scilit:
- Do Takeover Targets Underperform? Evidence from Operating and Stock ReturnsJournal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis, 2003
- Investigating the Economic Role of MergersSSRN Electronic Journal, 1998
- Formal and Real Authority in OrganizationsJournal of Political Economy, 1997
- Renegotiation Design with Unverifiable InformationEconometrica, 1994
- Unionization, Incomplete Contracting, and Capital InvestmentThe Journal of Business, 1993
- The Threat of Unionization, the Use of Debt, and the Preservation of Shareholder WealthThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1991
- Event risk, covenants, and bondholder returns in leveraged buyoutsJournal of Financial Economics, 1990
- The Existence of Self-Enforcing Implicit ContractsThe Quarterly Journal of Economics, 1987
- Loyalty filtersPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1984
- Productivity and Labor Unions: An Application of the Theory of Self- Enforcing ContractsThe Journal of Business, 1983