Capital Rationing by Metrics - Implications for IOR/EOR-projects

Author(s):  
P.O. Osmundsen
Keyword(s):  
2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Petter Osmundsen ◽  
Kjell Løvås ◽  
Magne Emhjellen

2020 ◽  
Vol V (I) ◽  
pp. 220-230
Author(s):  
Kanwal Iqbal Khan ◽  
Adeel Nasir ◽  
Aniqa Arslan

This study is conducted to identify the direction of the relationship between working capital management (WCM) and firm performance of the non-financial sector of Pakistan from 2009 till 2018. This has also looked at the effect of restricted access to loan on the WCM- Profitability relationship. The findings confirmed that restricted loan accessibility impacts the WCM-Profitability relationship. The comparative analysis demonstrated that financially constrained firms are mostly non-family firms that are new, growing, smaller in size, face high risk, maintain high liquidity and tangibility ratios than non-constrained firms. Further, the working capital levels of financially constraint firms is lower because of high operating expenses and greater capital rationing. Managers and scholars may use these findings for the administration of their working capital policies in order to avoid the financial cost and create more opportunities for financial accessibility which is further beneficial for making informed investment decisions, yielding higher profits that contribute towards sustainable growth.


1994 ◽  
Vol 40 (3) ◽  
pp. 305-319 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nejat Karabakal ◽  
Jack R. Lohmann ◽  
James C. Bean

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Petter Osmundsen ◽  
Kjell LLvvs ◽  
Magne Emhjellen

2007 ◽  
Vol 202 ◽  
pp. 34-41 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ray Barrell ◽  
Dawn Holland

Over the summer of 2007 problems began to emerge in financial markets as a result of debt defaults, particularly on US housing lending to individuals with low credit ratings. The globalisation of financial markets has meant that such risks are shared across banks throughout the world and a number of European banks suffered major losses as a result of purchasing high yield high risk bundles of these assets. In this note we discuss the possibility of a systemic banking crisis as a result of debt defaults, putting this risk and its impact on the economy into recent historical context. We also look at the vulnerability of the personal and business sectors to increases in borrowing rates, and at the evidence for a risk related rise in borrowing rates. We then use our model, NiGEM, to investigate the impacts of a significant rise in the spread between lending and borrowing rates for both producers and consumers. Such an increase in spreads might arise when banks wish to rebuild their capital after a crisis or reflect significant capital rationing. In either case they represent the immediate impacts of a crisis in the banking sector. The spread between borrowing and lending rates for producers reflects a risk premium in the business sector, and was used in the September EFN report to the European Commission, whilst the spread between consumer lending and borrowing rates is in use for the first time on the model. The debt-to-income ratio has been rising in the personal sector in a number of countries, and especially in the UK, Ireland and Spain, as we can see from figure 1, and this might indicate where problems could arise.


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