Image from Google Jackets

Sale and leaseback, asset outsourcing and capital market impacts

By: Contributor(s): Series: Journal of Corporate Real Estate ; 6(2) 2004, 118-132(15)Publication details: 2004Subject(s): Summary: Structured sale and leasebacks and corporate property asset outsourcing are often claimed to have benefits that seem to be inconsistent with financial theory. Eight such UK deals are analysed to investigate that impact on corporate value. The results show that impacts are contingent - on the capital structure of the firm, on the use of the capital raised and on market attitudes towards management and the sector. Two apparently similar deals can have quite different outcomes: benefits to shareholders and bondholders cannot be simply assumed. [Taken from journal abstract]
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Barcode
Journal article London Journal article ABS67902 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 126468-1001

Structured sale and leasebacks and corporate property asset outsourcing are often claimed to have benefits that seem to be inconsistent with financial theory. Eight such UK deals are analysed to investigate that impact on corporate value. The results show that impacts are contingent - on the capital structure of the firm, on the use of the capital raised and on market attitudes towards management and the sector. Two apparently similar deals can have quite different outcomes: benefits to shareholders and bondholders cannot be simply assumed. [Taken from journal abstract]