Search results

1 – 2 of 2
Article
Publication date: 21 November 2024

Anton Miglo

Crowdfunding is a rapidly growing phenomenon in theory and practice. A significant gap exists between theoretical literature and empirical evidence regarding the volumes of…

Abstract

Purpose

Crowdfunding is a rapidly growing phenomenon in theory and practice. A significant gap exists between theoretical literature and empirical evidence regarding the volumes of crowdfunding and the quality of firms that use crowdfunding.

Design/methodology/approach

This is one of the first articles that offers a theory of entrepreneurs' choice between debt, equity and crowdfunding (reward-based). It uses a game-theoretic model where information about the expected quality of products developed by entrepreneurs is asymmetric.

Findings

We argue that in most cases crowdfunding is at the end of pecking order. The payments in the form of pre-orders come before the project investment is made making the entrepreneur's profit independent of actual quality of the product creating a strong ground for cross-subsidies of low-quality entrepreneurs by high-quality entrepreneurs in a pooling equilibrium.

Originality/value

The paper is consistent with some well-known empirical phenomena on crowdfunding, e.g. relatively small volumes of crowdfunding vs traditional funding, low volumes of reward-based crowdfunding vs debt-based and equity-based crowdfunding and excess entry of low-quality firms to crowdfunding market. We further compare this approach with an approach based on asymmetric information about the cost of production/investment (as in Belleflamme et al. (2014) and some other papers) and argue that even though some predictions maybe close under some general assumptions both approaches lead to qualitatively different results.

Details

Journal of Economic Studies, vol. ahead-of-print no. ahead-of-print
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0144-3585

Keywords

Abstract

Theoretical basis

Capital structure theory.

Research methodology

The case is meant for teaching and class discussion, and uses only secondary data based on published sources. The interpretation and perspectives presented are based solely on the secondary data.

Case overview/synopsis

This paper aims to help current and future managers understand capital structure theory and the various equity and debt finance options available for raising capital. It also examines the financial analysis and strategic management of black swan events. After the class discussion, students will understand how to financially and strategically manage a company during black swan events and also have a deep dive into capital structure analysis of a large company.

Complexity academic level

MBA/postgraduate/undergraduate courses on corporate finance or advanced corporate finance. Executive/management development programs and short duration Massive Open Online Courses on investment decision-making and advanced corporate finance. MBA/postgraduate/undergraduate courses on corporate strategy and economic environment and planning.

1 – 2 of 2