We argue that the relative expertise of contracting parties strongly affects contractual outcomes. Using unique data on company acquisition contracts, we document that lawyers with higher expertise relative to their counterparties negotiate better risk allocation for their clients and more favourable target prices. The benefits of high expertise outweigh its costs, largely because high-expertise lawyers economise on transaction costs by shortening negotiation times. Our findings suggest a need for explicit modelling of contracting skills, and they help explain heterogeneity in legal fees across law firms and the role of league tables of law firms
In a hand-coded sample of M&A contracts from 2007-08, risk allocation provisions exhibit wide variat...
Economic contract theory postulates two obstacles to complete contracts: high transaction costs and ...
In this article, we combine two sources of data to shed light on the nature of transactional legal w...
We argue that the relative expertise of contracting parties strongly affects contractual outcomes. U...
We use proprietary data to look into the "black box" of M&A negotiations and to shed light on the ef...
This thesis considers the role of contracts and legal advisors in corporate acquisitions. M&A transa...
This article studies the impact of exogenous legal change on whether and how lawyers across four dif...
Legal scholars and legal educators view contracts as a welfare-maximizing (or optimal risk-allocatin...
Real-world financial contracts are sometimes so complex that it can be difficult to understand their...
Previous research suggests that parties in contractual relationships adopt a governance structure th...
Following the contraction in demand for law firms’ services during the Great Recession, “Big Law” wa...
I augment transaction cost economics and the learning to contract perspective by outlining the effec...
Contract theory does not address the question of how parties design contracts under the existing adv...
Despite the extensive use of contracts in business transactions, little is known whether an organiza...
As a subcategory of contract negotiations, corporate transactions present information problems that ...
In a hand-coded sample of M&A contracts from 2007-08, risk allocation provisions exhibit wide variat...
Economic contract theory postulates two obstacles to complete contracts: high transaction costs and ...
In this article, we combine two sources of data to shed light on the nature of transactional legal w...
We argue that the relative expertise of contracting parties strongly affects contractual outcomes. U...
We use proprietary data to look into the "black box" of M&A negotiations and to shed light on the ef...
This thesis considers the role of contracts and legal advisors in corporate acquisitions. M&A transa...
This article studies the impact of exogenous legal change on whether and how lawyers across four dif...
Legal scholars and legal educators view contracts as a welfare-maximizing (or optimal risk-allocatin...
Real-world financial contracts are sometimes so complex that it can be difficult to understand their...
Previous research suggests that parties in contractual relationships adopt a governance structure th...
Following the contraction in demand for law firms’ services during the Great Recession, “Big Law” wa...
I augment transaction cost economics and the learning to contract perspective by outlining the effec...
Contract theory does not address the question of how parties design contracts under the existing adv...
Despite the extensive use of contracts in business transactions, little is known whether an organiza...
As a subcategory of contract negotiations, corporate transactions present information problems that ...
In a hand-coded sample of M&A contracts from 2007-08, risk allocation provisions exhibit wide variat...
Economic contract theory postulates two obstacles to complete contracts: high transaction costs and ...
In this article, we combine two sources of data to shed light on the nature of transactional legal w...