Banks all over the world show interest in acting as venture capitalists. In this paper, I argue that banks offer venture capital (VC) financing along with traditional (collateralized) loans in response to the natural constraints of the hidden information that they face. Innovative entrepreneurs pursue new technology that promises high return but runs a high risk of failure. The more innovative entrepreneurs also have higher reservation utility. This interaction between type-dependent returns and reservation utility creates a situation where collateral alone is not sufficient to screen entrepreneurs, and the uninformed bank needs an additional screening device. VC fulfils that role
This paper examines bank behavior in venture capital. It considers the relation between a bank’s ven...
ABSTRACT Venture capitalist are intermediaries with strong advantages in financing risky investments...
We study the financing strategies of 191 start-ups after they have received venture capital (VC) and...
If control of their firms allows entrepreneurs to derive private benefits, it also allows other cont...
This article is the first to identify the disruption in tech lending by outlier commercial banks and...
I develop a model in which entrepreneurs and investors can hold-up each other once the venture is un...
Why do some start-up firms raise funds from banks and others from venture capitalists? To answer th...
Innovators are necessary for the engine of economic growth. Why do banks still find innovators, from...
White investing, venture capitalists and bankers encounter similar problems. Deciding which young co...
We analyze how entrepreneurial firms choose between two funding institution: banks, which monitor le...
The paper augments the asymmetric information literature on bank lending to new ventures by focusing...
The paper investigates the relationship between bank interest rate margins and collateral for loans ...
In the course of ordinary business, commercial banks frequently encounter entrepreneurs seeking loan...
The topic of this paper is to analyze comparatively the interest and the advantages of the existence...
Startups desperately need funding. But lending to startups is too risky for banks. How can banks le...
This paper examines bank behavior in venture capital. It considers the relation between a bank’s ven...
ABSTRACT Venture capitalist are intermediaries with strong advantages in financing risky investments...
We study the financing strategies of 191 start-ups after they have received venture capital (VC) and...
If control of their firms allows entrepreneurs to derive private benefits, it also allows other cont...
This article is the first to identify the disruption in tech lending by outlier commercial banks and...
I develop a model in which entrepreneurs and investors can hold-up each other once the venture is un...
Why do some start-up firms raise funds from banks and others from venture capitalists? To answer th...
Innovators are necessary for the engine of economic growth. Why do banks still find innovators, from...
White investing, venture capitalists and bankers encounter similar problems. Deciding which young co...
We analyze how entrepreneurial firms choose between two funding institution: banks, which monitor le...
The paper augments the asymmetric information literature on bank lending to new ventures by focusing...
The paper investigates the relationship between bank interest rate margins and collateral for loans ...
In the course of ordinary business, commercial banks frequently encounter entrepreneurs seeking loan...
The topic of this paper is to analyze comparatively the interest and the advantages of the existence...
Startups desperately need funding. But lending to startups is too risky for banks. How can banks le...
This paper examines bank behavior in venture capital. It considers the relation between a bank’s ven...
ABSTRACT Venture capitalist are intermediaries with strong advantages in financing risky investments...
We study the financing strategies of 191 start-ups after they have received venture capital (VC) and...