FIN-02-027 |
NYU Stern School of Business |
September 2002
Florian Heider
ABSTRACT
When insiders (management) of a firm have more information than outsiders (investors) then
insiders’ desire to sell overpriced securities creates an Adverse Selection problem. To mitigate the
problem, the Pecking-Order hypothesis proposes that debt finance should dominates equity finance.
But according to the debt rationing literature, debt finance is also prone to the Adverse Selection
problem. The paper addresses the puzzle by allowing firms to issue both debt and equity together
and by having a general notion of what it is that insiders know more about. We show that safe
firms use more equity than risk firms to credibly signal their type to investors. The paper provides
a generalization of the existing financial signalling literature and reconciles previously contradictory
findings.
Florian Heider
Institution: Leonard N. Stern School of Business, New York University
Telephone: 212-998-0311
Fax: 212-995-4233
Email: fheider@stern.nyu.edu
Home Page: http://www.stern.nyu.edu/~fheider
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