posted on 2007-03-01, 00:00authored byEva Carceles Poveda, Daniele Coen-Pirani
In the macroeconomic literature, the implications of a context with
household heterogeneity and incomplete financial markets have been mostly studied under
the assumption that households own the physical capital and undertake the intertemporal
investment decision. Further, firms rent capital and labor from the households to
maximize period profits. The present paper provides the conditions under which this assumption
is still irrelevant when markets are incomplete. It shows that, if firms own the
physical capital and undertake the investment decision to maximize their asset value, in
the sense that they discount future cash flows with positive state price processes that are
consistent with security prices, the equilibrium allocations are the same as in the standard
setting with static firms. On the other hand, the firm valuation of future cash flows
only coincides with the valuation of the unconstrained shareholders. Given this, value
maximization may still lead to shareholder disagreement in the presence of effectively
binding portfolio restrictions.