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Renegotiation Costs and Debt Contract Design

Scott Dyreng1; Elia Ferracuti1; Arthur Morris2

1 Duke University · 2 The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

The Accounting Review 2025 open access

ABSTRACT We examine the relation between debt contract renegotiation costs and contract design. We use a plausibly exogenous shock to expected renegotiation costs arising from a change in the taxation of debt renegotiations to show that, as renegotiation costs decline, the maturity of debt contracts lengthens, the initial likelihood of covenant violation increases, and the use of performance pricing provisions becomes less frequent. The evidence indicates that ex ante allocation of cash flow rights and ex post reallocation of decision rights through renegotiation are local substitutes, where the preference for one mechanism versus the other depends, at least in part, on renegotiation costs. Data Availability: Data are available from the public sources cited in the text. JEL Classifications: G32; G33; G38.

DOI
10.2308/tar-2023-0418
Volume
100 (6)
Pages
113-138
Language
en
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