State contract law and the use of accounting information in debt contracts

This paper examines the relation between state contract law and the use of accounting information in debt contracts. Contract theory suggests that balance sheet based covenants resolve debtholder-shareholder conflicts ex ante, whereas income statement based covenants serve as trip- wires that trigge...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inReview of accounting studies Vol. 26; no. 1; pp. 124 - 171
Main Authors Honigsberg, Colleen, Katz, Sharon P., Mutlu, Sunay, Sadka, Gil
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York Springer US 01.03.2021
Springer Nature B.V
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Summary:This paper examines the relation between state contract law and the use of accounting information in debt contracts. Contract theory suggests that balance sheet based covenants resolve debtholder-shareholder conflicts ex ante, whereas income statement based covenants serve as trip- wires that trigger the switch of control rights ex post. It is more difficult for lenders to exert their control rights ex post if the contract law is more favorable to debtors (i.e., the law is pro-debtor), suggesting that balance sheet based covenants are more efficient in these jurisdictions. We therefore test and find evidence that lenders using pro-debtor (pro-lender) law are more (less) likely to rely on balance sheet based covenants. We measure reliance using both the weight of balance sheet covenants relative to income statement covenants and the covenant strictness. Our analysis further shows that contracts with performance pricing grids are less likely to include interest increasing grids when the law is more favorable to debtors. The results provide initial evidence that contract law is an important determinant for the design of debt contracts.
ISSN:1380-6653
1573-7136
DOI:10.1007/s11142-020-09559-4