Adverse Selection and Capital Structure: Evidence from Venture Capital. Adverse Selection and Capital Structure: Evidence from Venture Capital.

Adverse Selection and Capital Structure: Evidence from Venture Capital‪.‬

Entrepreneurship: Theory and Practice 2006, March, 30, 2

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Publisher Description

Venture capitalists (VCs) in all non-U.S. countries around the world have consistently reported the use of a variety of securities, including common equity, preferred equity, convertible preferred equity, debt, convertible debt, and combinations (in the U.S., VCs typically use convertible preferred equity, and there is a tax bias in favor of that instrument in the U.S.). The types of entrepreneurial firms that receive venture finance may be defined by a variety of characteristics, such as stage of development, type of industry, and capital requirements. Given this broad context observed in practice, previous research has not considered the extent to which different securities, among the complete class of forms of finance, attract different types of entrepreneurial firms. In this article, we investigate the empirical tractability of the adverse selection risks associated with capital structure from 4,114 first-round Canadian venture capital investments. We first characterize the nature of uncertainty (in terms of the risk of financing a lemon or a nut) facing investors for different types of entrepreneurial firms. We then show that VC syndication significantly mitigates problems of adverse selection. Introduction

GENRE
Business & Personal Finance
RELEASED
2006
1 March
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
59
Pages
PUBLISHER
Baylor University
SIZE
337.2
KB

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