Publication | Closed Access
Corporate Bankruptcy in Korea: Only the Strong Survive?
41
Citations
26
References
2000
Year
Pre‐crisis LeverageFinancial RiskInternational Financial CrisisBankruptcyInternational FinanceCorporate Risk ManagementManagementFinancial IntermediationCredit MarketCorporate GovernanceCorporate LawFinanceLiquidity ConstraintsCorporate BankruptcyBank CreditBusinessFinancial StructureCorporate FinanceFinancial Crisis
Abstract We analyze whether the build‐up of financial vulnerabilities led listed Korean companies to bankruptcy. We find that pre‐crisis leverage is systematically high for both poor performing/slow growing firms and for profitable/fast‐growing firms. Pre‐crisis leverage raises the probability of bankruptcy, which is lower for firms: (1) relying more on (renegotiable) bank credit; (2) with less inter‐firm debt; and (3) having higher interest coverage ratios. Finally, none of these liquidity variables help predict bankruptcies for chaebol‐firms, suggesting that liquidity constraints are more stringent for non‐chaebol. Thus, in a systemic crisis it is not only the strong/healthy that survive.
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