Financial distress

PrepNuggets

Costs of financial distress refer not just to the explicit costs of company default and bankruptcy, but also the implicit costs due to the stresses of lower earnings or losses that precede such events. Even before having to file for bankruptcy, companies under stress may lose customers, suppliers, and valuable employees.

Another important aspect to consider is the probability of financial distress. Debt is considered an obligation, and often carry fixed interest costs. As a firm tries to raise more capital through debt, the probability of not being able to service its debt obligations increases, so debt investors will demand higher returns to compensate for the higher risk, leading to the upward sloping cost of debt curve.

Other factors that can affect the probability of financial distress include the quality of a firm’s management and the company’s corporate governance structure. Lower quality management and corporate governance lead to a higher probability of financial distress.

See also: Static trade-off theory