Financing Risk and Bubbles of Innovation - Harvard Business School
Wednesday, September 8, 2010 at 09:18PM
Ralph Kerle in Innovation, Innovation, Risk, financing

Download this new paper http://www.hbs.edu/research/pdf/11-013.pdf from Ramana Nanda and Matthew Rhodes-Kropf of the Harvard Business School offering some insights into innovation risk.

Paper Abstract

Investors in risky startups who stage their investments face financing risk-that is, the risk that later—stage investors will not fund the startup, even if the fundamentals of the firm are still sound. We show that financing risk is part of a rational equilibrium where investors can flip from investing to not investing in certain sectors of the economy. We further demonstrate that financing risk has the greatest impact on firms with the most real option value. Hence, the mix of projects funded and type of investors who are active varies with the level of financing risk in the economy. We also highlight that some extremely novel technologies may in fact need "hot" financial markets to get through the initial period of diffusion. Our work underscores that financial markets may play a much larger and under-studied role in creating and magnifying bubbles of innovation in the real economy.


Article originally appeared on The Creative Leadership Forum - Collaborate - Create - Commercialise & Transformational Change (http://thecreativeleadershipforum.com/).
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