Vulture Funds and Fresh Start Accounting of Firms Emerging from
Event Title
INSEAD Accounting Research Seminar
Year (definitive publication)
2014
Language
English
Country
France
More Information
--
Web of Science®
This publication is not indexed in Web of Science®
Scopus
This publication is not indexed in Scopus
Google Scholar
Abstract
When firms emerge from Chapter 11 bankruptcy of the US Bankruptcy Code historic
accounting valuations are cancelled and replaced with updated synthetic market value estimates in
order to give the firm a fresh start. We find that distress oriented hedge funds that follow a loan
to own investment strategy (i.e. vulture funds that acquire distressed debt that is swapped for
equity in the emerging firm) strategically influence the fresh start accounting value of the
Chapter 11 firm. Holding critical positions in the capital structure of the distressed firm grants
vulture funds great influence over the bankruptcy negotiations and the determination of the fresh
start value. They have strong incentives to influence fresh start valuations because the effective
implementation of a loan to own strategy critically depends on the value of their equity position
at emergence. We test for such influence by looking at changes in firm value before and after
emergence from Chapter 11. We find that the vulture funds that hold strategic debt positions can
maximize their returns by driving down firm value at the emergence of Chapter 11 and then they are
pleased to see them being driven up
when actual market trading commences.
Acknowledgements
--
Keywords
financial distress, bankruptcy, debt trading, market values, fresh start valuation