Abstract
This study examines the financing of innovation in the presence of adverse selection in the capital market. An entrepreneur with private information needs outside funding for a project requiring costly experimentation. Equilibrium contracts use the duration of the experimentation period, together with pay-for-performance, to signal information to outside investors. As a result, investment is delayed, entrepreneurs with stronger growth options receive vested stock options, and entrepreneurs with a lower probability of success are compensated in case of failure. These predictions are in line with empirical evidence on venture capital contracts, and on the impact of internal financing on risk taking.
Reference
Matthieu Bouvard, “Real Option Financing under Asymmetric Information”, The Review of Financial Studies, vol. 27, n. 1, 2014, pp. 180–210.
Published in
The Review of Financial Studies, vol. 27, n. 1, 2014, pp. 180–210