Publication | Open Access
Capital Structure Decisions: Which Factors Are Reliably Important?
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Citations
77
References
2009
Year
Empirical FinanceRelative ImportanceCost Of CapitalCorporate Risk ManagementManagementPayout PolicyCapital Structure DecisionsCorporate GovernanceFinancial PerspectiveFinanceMacro FinanceFinancial EconomicsReal InvestmentMedian Industry LeverageBusinessEmpirical EvidenceFinancial StructureCapital StructureCorporate Finance
Empirical evidence largely supports certain versions of the trade‑off theory of capital structure. The study examines which factors most reliably influence capital structure decisions of publicly traded U.S. firms from 1950 to 2003.
This paper examines the relative importance of many factors in the capital structure decisions of publicly traded American firms from 1950 to 2003. The most reliable factors for explaining market leverage are: median industry leverage (+ effect on leverage), market‐to‐book assets ratio (−), tangibility (+), profits (−), log of assets (+), and expected inflation (+). In addition, we find that dividend‐paying firms tend to have lower leverage. When considering book leverage, somewhat similar effects are found. However, for book leverage, the impact of firm size, the market‐to‐book ratio, and the effect of inflation are not reliable. The empirical evidence seems reasonably consistent with some versions of the trade‐off theory of capital structure.
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