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Manchester Grand Hyatt, Seaport B
Hosted By:
American Finance Association
Corporate Disclosure and Incentives
Paper Session
Sunday, Jan. 5, 2020 1:00 PM - 3:00 PM (PDT)
- Chair: Ivan Marinovic, Stanford University
Corporate Disclosure as a Tacit Coordination Mechanism: Evidence from Cartel Enforcement Regulations
Abstract
We empirically study how collusion in product markets affects firms’ financial disclosure strategies. We find that after a rise in cartel enforcement, U.S. firms start sharing more detailed information in their financial disclosure about their customers, contracts, and products. This new information potentially benefits peers by helping to tacitly coordinate actions in product markets. Indeed, changes in disclosure are associated with higher future profitability. Our findings suggest that transparency in financial statements can come at the expense of consumer welfare.Voluntary Disclosure, Moral Hazard and Default Risk
Abstract
We study a dynamic moral hazard setting where the manager has private evidence that predicts the firm's cash flows. When performance is low, bad news disclosure is rewarded by a lower borrowing cost relative to the no-evidence case. In contrast, no disclosure is associated with higher borrowing costs. On net, disclosure weakens the relation between cash incentives (or stock values) and short-term performance, which lowers the firm's default risk on path. However, the expectation of future disclosure might increase the optimal initial level of debt, to a point where the firm's default risk actually rises relative to the no-evidence case.Discussant(s)
Martin Szydlowski
,
University of Minnesota
John Kepler
,
Stanford University
Felipe Varas
,
Duke University
JEL Classifications
- G3 - Corporate Finance and Governance