Saul Levmore Presents on Sunk Costs and Exploding Offers at Case Western

Saul Levmore Lectures on Law and Economics at the School of Law

On Sept. 23, the Center for Business Law welcomed Professor Saul Levmore as part of its 2024-2025 lecture series to present his thoughts on Sunk Costs and Exploding Offers. He is the William B. Graham Distinguished Service Professor at the University of Chicago Law School where he has previously served as dean. He is a renowned and prolific scholar, who has written and taught in numerous areas, including torts, corporations, copyright, non-profit organizations, comparative law, public choice, corporate tax, commercial law, insurance, and contracts. His work is heavily focused in law and economics, and he is a leader in that area, including serving as the past president of the American Law and Economics Association.

Levmore’s lecture explored the sunk cost fallacy in which people fail to abandon a course of action because of the costs that they have already invested in the undertaking. In doing so, they ignore the critical need to assess the value of the undertaking based on the future probability and worth of success. Levmore used insights into the sunk cost fallacy to explore how a bidder’s sunk cost in investigating a target might influence the decision to proceed or abandon the acquisition of a target company. He noted that bidders must also pay attention to the winner’s curse of often overbidding based on the value of the item sought to avoid paying too much for a target company. He also analyzed why a bidder in a corporate acquisition might want to make an exploding offer to block competitors.

Read more at Case Western Reserve University School of Law