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Taking a Financial Position in Your Opponent in Litigation

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Taking a Financial Position in Your Opponent in Litigation
Abstract
Before filing suit, a plaintiff can take a financial position in a defendant firm. A short position benefits the plaintiff by transforming a negative expected-value claim into a positive expected-value one and by enhancing the claim's settlement value. If the capital market is less than strong-form efficient, the plaintiff also benefits directly from the decline in the defendant's stock price. When the defendant is privately informed about the case's merits, bargaining failures can arise. While aggressive short-selling benefits the plaintiff at the expense of the defendant, moderate levels of short-selling can benefit the defendant and raise the settlement rate.
Publication
American Economic Review
Volume
108
Issue
12
Pages
3626-50
Date
2018-12
Citation
Choi, A. H., & Spier, K. E. (2018). Taking a Financial Position in Your Opponent in Litigation. American Economic Review, 108, 3626–3650.
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