scholarly journals Capital Structure and Financial Flexibility: Expectations of Future Shocks

2014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Costas Lambrinoudakis ◽  
Michael Neumann ◽  
George S. Skiadopoulos
2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (5) ◽  
pp. 688-699
Author(s):  
Carlo Mari ◽  
Marcella Marra

PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to present a model to value leveraged firms in the presence of default risk and bankruptcy costs under a flexible firm’s debt structure.Design/methodology/approachThe authors assume that the total debt of the firm is a combination of two debt components. The first component is an active debt component which is assumed to be proportional to the firm’s value. The second one is a passive predetermined risk-free debt component. The combination of the two debt categories makes the firm’s capital structure more realistic and allows us to include flexibility into the firm’s debt structure management. The firm’s valuation is performed using the discounted cash flow technique based on the weighted average cost of capital (WACC) method.FindingsThe model can be used to define active debt management strategies that can induce the firm to deviate from its capital structure target in order to preserve debt capacity for future funding needs. The firm’s valuation is performed by using the WACC method and a closed form valuation formula is provided. Such a formula can be used to value costs and benefits of financial flexibility.Research limitations/implicationsThe proposed approach provides a good compromise between mathematical complexity and model capability of interpreting the various economic and financial aspects involved in the firm’s debt structure puzzle.Practical implicationsThis model offers a realistic approach to practical applications where real financing decisions are characterized by a simultaneous use of these two debt categories. By comparing costs and benefits deriving from using unused debt capacity for future funding needs, the model provides a quantitative support to investigate if financial flexibility can add value to firms.Originality/valueTo the authors knowledge, the approach the authors propose is the first attempt to build a valuation scheme that accounts for firm’s financial flexibility under default risky debt and bankruptcy costs. Including financial flexibility, this model fills an important gap in the literature on this topic.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 370-382
Author(s):  
Sari Fitri Fatimah ◽  
Rini Setyo Witiastuti

This research is intended to prove the influence of financial flexibility, asset structure, firm size, profitability and business risk on the capital structure. The population on this study are property, real estate and building construction sector that are listed on the Indonesia Stock Exchange in 2009-2018. The number of samples used were 28 companies with a purposive sampling method. The data studied was obtained from the Indonesia Stock Exchange (IDX). Methods of data analysis used in this study is multiple linear regression. The results showed that financial flexibility has not significant  negative effect on capital structure. Asset structure and firm size have a significant positive effect on capital structure. The profitability and business risk have a significant negative effect on capital structure. Further research is needed to use another proxies such as ROE for profitability variables or standard deviations from ROE for business risk on capital structure and add another sectors or the number of observation periods.


2018 ◽  
Vol 23 (4) ◽  
pp. 446-481
Author(s):  
Amanda Gregg ◽  
Steven Nafziger

Abstract This article investigates the financing of corporations in industrialization’s early stages by examining new balance sheet data describing all Imperial Russian corporations in 1914. We emphasize differences between two Russian corporation types: share partnerships and A-corporations. Share partnerships issued greater dividends, were less likely to issue bonds, and had larger accounts payable. We find that capital structures varied with age, size, and sector according to modern corporate finance theories and that scaled profits did not demonstrate differential market power across corporation types. Thus, Russian corporations exhibited considerable financial flexibility, and reducing incorporation costs could have benefited the Imperial Russian economy.


2013 ◽  
Vol 5 (14) ◽  
pp. 3843-3850 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roya Darabi ◽  
Salah Mohamadi ◽  
Ahmad GHasemi ◽  
Shanaz Forozan

2017 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 164-178
Author(s):  
Riska Urip Lestari ◽  
Danar Irianto

This study aimed to examine the effect of firm size, liquidity, financial flexibility, share growth, sale growth, business risk and profitability to capital structure. This study used secondary data from the company’s financial statements and determinan of the sample using techniques proposive sampling. The population in this study are manufacture companies listed on the Indonesian Stock Exchange (BEI) in the period  2011-2015 with a sample 55 companies. The result showed firm size has a positive effect to capital structure. Liquidity has a no effect to capital structure. Financial flexibility has a negative effect to capital structure. Sale growth has a positive effe ct to capital structure. Profitabilitas has a negatife effect to capital structure. Other result showed share growth and risk business has no effect to capital stucture. The result of the study are expected to add to the research literature that discuss the factors that effect of capital structure on manufacture companies. Further research can add control variable. Key Words:  Capital structure, Firm size, Liquidity, Financial flexibility, share growth, sale growth, business risk, Profitability


2019 ◽  
Vol 31 (3) ◽  
pp. 35-49
Author(s):  
Christophe Cathala

How long do firms need time to reduce their debt level? We know from literature that the process is not rapid and mainly justified by the need to ensure financial flexibility in case of opportunities in the near future. Our purpose is to observe the behaviour of Polish firms in such process and the time needed (if any) to come back to their bottom border in terms of debt level. Our focal point is to appreciate if we have differences between firms in terms of size and sectors which could influence capital structure theories. The debt level defined is the debt net ratio, observed over 12 years (from 2006 to 2017) with a trough level estimated at the median of the ratio over such period. In line with previous studies, we find that the process to come back to the trough is not so rapid. However, and it is the originality of our article, we find significant differences between firms in terms of size (3.27 years for small firms against 5.13 years for medium firms and 4.53 years for large firms) and in terms of sectors. Our findings are consistent with a capital structure theory which focuses on differences between firms in terms of size and sectors to generalize some consistent and recurrent behaviors towards debt.


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