We use exogenous variation in tax benefit functions to estimate firm-specific cost of debt functions that are conditional on company characteristics such as collateral, size, and book-to-market. By integrating the area between the benefit and cost functions, we estimate that the equilibrium net benefit of debt is 3.5% of asset value, resulting from an estimated gross benefit (cost) of debt equal to 10.4% (6.9%) of asset value. We find that the cost of being overlevered is asymmetrically higher than the cost of being underlevered and that expected default costs constitute only half of the total ex ante costs of debt
This paper develops and analyzes a dynamic model of leverage, tak-ing account of tax deductibility o...
This chapter reviews the theories of taxes, bankruptcy costs, transactions costs, adverse selection,...
The traditional textbook method of calculating a corporation’s cost of debt capital tends to minimiz...
We re-examine the claim that many corporations are underleveraged in that they fail to take full adv...
We re-examine the claim that many corporations are underleveraged in that they fail to take full adv...
We use a dynamic model of the \u85rm to ascertain both the value and the determinants of the tax ben...
The standard approach to valuing interest tax shields assumes that full tax benefits are realized on...
This paper studies the valuation of assets with debt tax shields when debt policy is a general time-...
The work deals with the role of cost of debt capital in the process of market valuation. Analyses us...
The pricing and control of firms' debt has become a major issue since Merton's (1974) seminal articl...
<p>The costs and constraints to financing, and the factors that influence them, play critical roles ...
Now that debt has replaced equity as the preferred source of finance for many UK companies, the corr...
Debt financing of investment projects, used to complete internal sources, has benefits that increase...
In this study, we use cross-sectional regressions to estimate the value of the debt-tax shield. Reco...
The authors provide a reasonably user-friendly and intuitive model for arriving at a company\u27s op...
This paper develops and analyzes a dynamic model of leverage, tak-ing account of tax deductibility o...
This chapter reviews the theories of taxes, bankruptcy costs, transactions costs, adverse selection,...
The traditional textbook method of calculating a corporation’s cost of debt capital tends to minimiz...
We re-examine the claim that many corporations are underleveraged in that they fail to take full adv...
We re-examine the claim that many corporations are underleveraged in that they fail to take full adv...
We use a dynamic model of the \u85rm to ascertain both the value and the determinants of the tax ben...
The standard approach to valuing interest tax shields assumes that full tax benefits are realized on...
This paper studies the valuation of assets with debt tax shields when debt policy is a general time-...
The work deals with the role of cost of debt capital in the process of market valuation. Analyses us...
The pricing and control of firms' debt has become a major issue since Merton's (1974) seminal articl...
<p>The costs and constraints to financing, and the factors that influence them, play critical roles ...
Now that debt has replaced equity as the preferred source of finance for many UK companies, the corr...
Debt financing of investment projects, used to complete internal sources, has benefits that increase...
In this study, we use cross-sectional regressions to estimate the value of the debt-tax shield. Reco...
The authors provide a reasonably user-friendly and intuitive model for arriving at a company\u27s op...
This paper develops and analyzes a dynamic model of leverage, tak-ing account of tax deductibility o...
This chapter reviews the theories of taxes, bankruptcy costs, transactions costs, adverse selection,...
The traditional textbook method of calculating a corporation’s cost of debt capital tends to minimiz...