Tuesday, February 5, 2019
Capital Structure :: Economy, The Trade-Off Theory
The trade-off theory and the pecking frame theory suggest a negative relation between supplement and business risk. However, supported by literature Bennet and Donelly (1993), Huang and Song (2003), Booth et al. (2001), and Deemosak et al. (2004) the results presented flourish a strong and meaning(a) positive relation between them for only the measures of leverage. This relation can be justified by suggesting that crazy firms provide slant to use much debt since they cannot transfer wealth from bondholders to shareholders (Bennet and Donelly, 1993) or that firms with risky investments impart use higher levels of debt (Huang and Song, 2003). Additionally, a firm can growth its levels of risky investment if the costs and risk of entering into a settlement process is low (Deemosak et al., 2004). As the Latin American firms volatility of kale increases, they tend to rely in debt for their future investments. Focusing to the models including macro frugal indicators (columns commercializeplace as II) it can be seen that swelling has a strong and significant positive relation with leverage. The results, though, contradict with literature Booth et al. (2001), Barbosa and Moraes (2003) and Jorgensen and Terra (2003). Latin American countries harbor experienced high rates of inflation at the end of the 1990s however, since 1995, inflation has been decreasing. Despite the latter, internal and external financial crisis has led inflation to rise again at the end of 1990s and at the bloodline of 2000. The results suggest that Latin American firms increase their debt levels when inflation rises because in inflationary periods nominal liabilities, such as debt, depreciate in value, thus, become more attractive to the borrower. The ratio of stock market capitalization to GDP has a negative relation with all the dependent variables, as the capital market develop become a viable alternative firms will tend to use less debt. On the other hand, the ratio of deposit bullion bank to GDP displays a positive relation with leverage - as the banking sector increases, firms will have more incentive to use more debt. For both variables, the results concur with Booth et al. (2001) and with Agarwal and Mohatadi (2004). Booth et al. (2001) argue that higher economical growth tends to increase debt ratios, however, the results illustrate that in Latin American countries economic growth is negatively related with leverage (except for the long-term debt ratio indicating that firms will choose low debt levels during expansion in the business cycle).
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