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The Value of Investment Banking Relationships: Evidence from the Collapse of Lehman Brothers
147
Citations
61
References
2012
Year
Financial Risk ManagementLehman CollapseInvestment Bank RelationshipsLehman BrothersFinancial StructureFinancial SystemSecurities LawCorporate Risk ManagementManagementFinancial IntermediationInvestment Banking RelationshipsFinancial ManagementLoansGeneral BusinessCorporate GovernanceFinancial PerspectiveFinanceFinancial EconomicsBusinessFinancial CrisisEquity Underwriting ClientsCapital StructureCorporate FinanceFinancial Risk
ABSTRACT We examine the long‐standing question of whether firms derive value from investment bank relationships by studying how the Lehman collapse affected industrial firms that received underwriting, advisory, analyst, and market‐making services from Lehman. Equity underwriting clients experienced an abnormal return of around −5%, on average, in the 7 days surrounding Lehman's bankruptcy, amounting to $23 billion in aggregate risk‐adjusted losses. Losses were especially severe for companies that had stronger and broader security underwriting relationships with Lehman or were smaller, younger, and more financially constrained. Other client groups were not adversely affected.
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