Information Aggregation, Security Design, and Currency Swaps

Chowdhry, B and Grinblatt, M and Levine, D (2002) Information Aggregation, Security Design, and Currency Swaps. Journal of Political Economy, 110 (3). pp. 609-633. ISSN 0022-3808

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Abstract

A security design model shows that multinational firms needing to finance their operations should issue different securities to investors in different countries in order to aggregate their disparate information about domestic and foreign cash flows. However, if the firm becomes bankrupt, investors may face uncertain costs of reorganizing assets in a foreign country and thus may value foreign assets at their average value. This penalizes superior firms with low reorganization costs. Such firms minimize the adverse selection penalty by designing securities that allocate all the cash flow in bankruptcy to investors for which the adverse selection costs are the smallest given the exchange rate. We show that this sharing rule can be implemented with currency swaps because these instruments allow the priorities of claims in bankruptcy to switch depending on the exchange rate.

Item Type: Article
Additional Information: The research article was published by the author with the affiliation of UCLA Anderson School
Subjects: Finance
Date Deposited: 03 Aug 2023 20:13
Last Modified: 03 Aug 2023 20:13
URI: https://eprints.exchange.isb.edu/id/eprint/1810

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