Abstract
This study analyzes the relationship between management ownership and its risk-shiftingincentive. We first present a simple model showing that the risk-shifting incentive of management of financially distressed firms increases as the management ownership of the firm increases. Empirically, we test the hypothesis that under the former Japanese Corporate Reorganization Law, firms with higher management ownership are more likely to use legal rather than private reorganization. Since the reorganization process under the law virtually eliminates the possibility of risk-shifting investment, creditors are more likely to prefer the legal process to private process, when management ownership is higher. Empirical results are consistent with the hypothesis.