In a hand-coded sample of M&A contracts from 2007-08, risk allocation provisions exhibit wide variation. Earn-outs are the least common means to allocate risk, indemnities are most common, followed by price adjustment clauses. Techniques for mitigating enforcement costs - escrows, holdbacks, and seller financing - are common. Target SEC registration and ownership dispersion correlate negatively with the use and extent of risk sharing. Target-owners retain risk more frequently, but not universally or exclusively, in industries in which current liabilities vary more, and when buyers and targets are in different industries. Bidder and target law firm agents match on bid value and prior deal experience, but law firm mismatches are common, and b...
This article serves as an overview to provide basic knowledge for people previously unacquainted wit...
In a typical transaction for the sale and purchase of residential real estate there are two transiti...
Professional malpractice is currently treated as a tort in the U.S. Court system. However, cases of ...
Ownership dispersion is a first-order determinant of M&A practices. Firms with dispersed ownership a...
This thesis considers the role of contracts and legal advisors in corporate acquisitions. M&A transa...
Tort and contract, although both descended from a common ancestor in the forms of action at common l...
Why would two risk-average agents write a nominal contract? A possible answer is that for an agent w...
This research focuses on contractual mechanisms that will help to achieve a fair allocation of risk...
This article studies the impact of exogenous legal change on whether and how lawyers across four dif...
Long-term contracts are designed to manage risk. After a brief discussion of why it is unhelpful to ...
The purpose of the paper is to propose an original proprietary proxy of a firm's litigation risk. We...
In any large corporate acquisition, there is a delay between the time the parties enter into a merge...
This paper considers how project risk should be allocated between clients and contractors, where sig...
We argue that the relative expertise of contracting parties strongly affects contractual outcomes. U...
In any large corporate acquisition, there is an interim period between the time that the parties ent...
This article serves as an overview to provide basic knowledge for people previously unacquainted wit...
In a typical transaction for the sale and purchase of residential real estate there are two transiti...
Professional malpractice is currently treated as a tort in the U.S. Court system. However, cases of ...
Ownership dispersion is a first-order determinant of M&A practices. Firms with dispersed ownership a...
This thesis considers the role of contracts and legal advisors in corporate acquisitions. M&A transa...
Tort and contract, although both descended from a common ancestor in the forms of action at common l...
Why would two risk-average agents write a nominal contract? A possible answer is that for an agent w...
This research focuses on contractual mechanisms that will help to achieve a fair allocation of risk...
This article studies the impact of exogenous legal change on whether and how lawyers across four dif...
Long-term contracts are designed to manage risk. After a brief discussion of why it is unhelpful to ...
The purpose of the paper is to propose an original proprietary proxy of a firm's litigation risk. We...
In any large corporate acquisition, there is a delay between the time the parties enter into a merge...
This paper considers how project risk should be allocated between clients and contractors, where sig...
We argue that the relative expertise of contracting parties strongly affects contractual outcomes. U...
In any large corporate acquisition, there is an interim period between the time that the parties ent...
This article serves as an overview to provide basic knowledge for people previously unacquainted wit...
In a typical transaction for the sale and purchase of residential real estate there are two transiti...
Professional malpractice is currently treated as a tort in the U.S. Court system. However, cases of ...