In the path of the storm: does financial distress cause non-financial firms to risk-shift?

Kevin Aretz, Shantanu Banerjee, Oksana Pryshchepa

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

We study whether industrial firms risk-shift in response to distress risk increases induced through hurricane strikes. Using new proxies capturing deliberate managerial decisions about the risk of a firm’s operating segment portfolio, differences tests suggest that hurricane strikes prompt moderately, but not highly, distressed firms to skew their asset mixes toward riskier segments by shutting down low-risk, high-average-Q segments. In turn, the moderately distressed firms observe abnormally high failure rates after a hurricane strike. Employing covenant violation data, we offer further evidence that creditor control prevents highly distressed firms from raising their risk. Our conclusions extend those of other studies by suggesting that moderate distress risk levels can lead the managers of industrial firms to not only engage in risk-taking, but, in fact, in risk-shifting.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1115–1154
Number of pages40
JournalReview of Finance
Volume23
Issue number6
Early online date21 Aug 2018
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2019

Keywords

  • Agency conflicts
  • Risk-shifting
  • Financial distress
  • Segment data
  • Hurricane strikes

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