Publication | Open Access
The Determinants of Capital Structure: Capital Market-Oriented versus Bank-Oriented Institutions
211
Citations
65
References
2008
Year
Financial SystemFinancial InstitutionsFinancial EconomicsInternational FinanceFirm PerformanceFinancial ManagementInternational Capital MarketAccountingManagementBusinessCorporate Governance PracticesCorporate GovernanceLeverage RatioInternational BusinessFirm ProfitabilityFinanceCapital StructureFinancial Structure
The study examines how firms in capital market‑oriented economies such as the U.K. and U.S. determine their capital structure.
Abstract The paper investigates how firms operating in capital market-oriented economies (the U.K. and the U.S.) Using panel data and a two-step system-GMM procedure, the paper finds that the leverage ratio is positively affected by the tangibility of assets and the size of the firm, but declines with an increase in firm profitability, growth opportunities, and share price performance in both types of economies. The leverage ratio is also affected by the market conditions in which the firm operates. The degree and effectiveness of these determinants are dependent on the country's legal and financial traditions. The results also confirm that firms have target leverage ratioswith French firms being the fastest in adjusting their capital structure toward their target level and Japanese firms the slowest. Overall, the capital structure of a firm is heavily influenced by the economic environment and its institutions, corporate governance practices, tax systems, the borrower-lender relation, exposure to capital markets, and the level of investor protection in the country in which the firm operates.
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