Covenants and Third-Party Creditors: Empirical and Law & Economics Insights Into a Common Pool Problem

Author:   Daniela Matri
Publisher:   Springer International Publishing AG
Edition:   1st ed. 2017
ISBN:  

9783319620350


Pages:   265
Publication Date:   26 October 2017
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Covenants and Third-Party Creditors: Empirical and Law & Economics Insights Into a Common Pool Problem


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Overview

This book adds to the debate on the effects of covenants on third-party creditors (externalities), which have recently become a focus of discussion in the contexts of bankruptcy law, corporate law and corporate governance. The general thrust of the debate is that negative effects on third-party creditors predominate because banks act in their own self-interest. After systematising the debated potential positive and negative externalities of covenants, the book empirically examines these externalities: It investigates the banks’ factual conduct and its effects on third-party creditors in Germany and the US. The study’s most significant outcome is that it disproves the assumption that banks disregard third-party creditors’ interests. These findings are then interpreted with the tools of economic analysis; particularly, with the concept of common pool resources (CPRs). Around the aggregated value of the debtor company’s asset pool (as CPR) exists an n-person prisoner’s dilemma between banks and third-party creditors: No creditor knows when and under what conditions the other creditor will appropriate funds from the debtor company’s asset pool. This coordination problem is traditionally addressed by means of bankruptcy law and collaterals. However, the incentive structure that surrounds the bilateral private governance system created by covenants and an event of default clause (a CPR private governance system) is found to also be capable of tackling this problem. Moreover, the interaction between the different regulation spheres – bankruptcy law, collateral and the CPR private governance system − has important implications for both the aforementioned discussions as well as the legal treatment of covenants and event of default clauses. Covenants alone cannot be seen as an alternative to institutional regulation; the complete CPR private governance system and its interaction with institutional regulation must also be taken into consideration. In addition, their function must first find more acceptance and respect in the legal treatment of covenants and event of default clauses: The CPR private governance system fills a gap in the regulation of the tragedy of the commons by bankruptcy law and collateral. This has particularly important implications for the German § 138 BGB, § 826 BGB and ad hoc duties to disclose insider information.

Full Product Details

Author:   Daniela Matri
Publisher:   Springer International Publishing AG
Imprint:   Springer International Publishing AG
Edition:   1st ed. 2017
Weight:   5.502kg
ISBN:  

9783319620350


ISBN 10:   3319620355
Pages:   265
Publication Date:   26 October 2017
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Part I ─ Theoretical Framework and Development of Research Question: 1  Introduction ─ Covenants and Third-party Creditors.- 2 Self-help Devices of Creditor Protection.- 3 Covenants and Bilateral Creditor Protection.- Part II ─ The Systematisation of Third-party Creditor Effects of Covenants: Preliminary Framework: 4 Academic Discussion and the Relevance of Third-party Creditor Protection.- 5 Potential Externalities of the Bilateral Governance System.- 6 The Self-interested Behaviour of Banks and Its Legal Limits.- Part III ─ Empirical Research: Results and Re-evaluation of Preliminary Theory: 7 Design and Methodology.- 8 Results ─ Covenants as a Reciprocal Private Governance Creditor Protection System.- 9 Re-evaluation − Collectivisation of Creditor Protection Through Private Governance.- 10 Consequences for Legal Discussion.- Part IV ─ Summary and Outlook: 11 Summary.- 12 Outlook.

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