Two Essays on Corporate Liquidity Management

Two Essays on Corporate Liquidity Management
Author: Chang Liu (Writer on finance)
Publisher:
Total Pages: 115
Release: 2018
Genre: Corporations
ISBN:

My dissertation contains two essays regarding corporate liquidity management. In the first essay, we find that personal connections between borrowers and lenders have a significant impact on the choice of corporate liquidity. Connected firms tend to obtain larger credit lines and hold less cash. Closer personal ties result in easier access to credit lines during economic shocks, such as financial crisis and negative news of credit quality. In addition, connections help firms with tighter financial constraints or higher risk obtain larger amount of credit lines. Connections also increase the amount of credit lines of borrowers with less public debt. Overall, our findings suggest that reduced asymmetric information between borrowers and lenders can improve corporate liquidity management. In the second essay, we study the relationship between corporate liquidity choice and market value by using the market-to-book decomposition of Rhodes-Kropf, Robinson, and Viswanathan (2005). We find that sector overvaluation or long-run growth usually increase the portion of cash in the total corporate liquidity. The effect is stronger in firms with larger growth opportunities, better corporate governance, or longer investor horizons. Moreover, the choice between cash and credit lines for firms without credit ratings are more sensitive to the sector overvaluation or long-run growth. In addition, we find sector error and long-run growth have stronger effects on corporate liquidity in the long horizons.

Essays in Behavioral Corporate Finance

Essays in Behavioral Corporate Finance
Author: Hui Zheng
Publisher:
Total Pages: 186
Release: 2012
Genre:
ISBN:

This dissertation explores the extent to which managerial overconfidence affects corporate decisions. This analysis includes three essays, which address a wide range of corporate decisions including financing, investment, acquisition, innovation, liquidity management and advertising decisions. The first essay introduces a fine-tuned test of the relationship between managerial overconfidence and corporate decisions by taking the chief financial officer (CFO) overconfidence effect into account. Ex-ante, I identify financial policies and non-financial policies such as investment, innovation and acquisition as the primary managerial duties of CFOs and chief executive officers (CEOs) respectively. I construct overconfidence measures for both CEOs and CFOs and test the impact of CEO and CFO overconfidence, both on financial decisions and on nonfinancial decisions. Based on a sample of 1,173 S & P 1500 firms, I find that financial policies are primarily affected by CFO overconfidence while only CEO overconfidence affects nonfinancial decisions. My findings demonstrate that managerial biases affect corporate decisions and managerial duties shape the ways in which top managers influence corporate policies. The second essay investigates how overconfident CEOs allocate resources toward innovation activities. It argues that overconfident CEOs tend to have greater innovation input. To finance innovation, they save more cash out of the cash flow and spend more on innovation when the cash flow is high. Results from an empirical analysis of 1,015 S & P 1500 firms support this argument. Moreover, based on a series of financial constraint measurements, the effect of CEO overconfidence on liquidity management is found to be more pronounced in financially constrained firms and in highly innovative firms, but not in firms without financial constraints. With regards to innovation performance, overconfident CEOs tend to have more patents, but the overall quality of their patents is not significantly better than that of rational CEOs. The third essay introduces a simple model of firm advertising behavior in monopolistic competition industries and applies it to the situation of managerial overconfidence. The model shows that the optimal advertising to sales ratio is determined by both firm advertising competency and consumer preference. Overconfident CEOs are more willing to use advertising as a means to convey the quality of their firms and products. Such overestimation of the effects of advertising by overconfident CEOs will result in overspending on advertising. When financially constrained, an overconfident CEO's tendency to overspend will be curbed to some extent, but his amount of advertising will increase with cash flows. An empirical analysis of 654 S & P 1500 firms supports these predictions. The distorted effect of managerial overconfidence is more prominent when firms are financially constrained and when the overconfidence measure is continuous.

Managing Corporate Liquidity

Managing Corporate Liquidity
Author: Lance Moir
Publisher: Global Professional Publishi
Total Pages: 216
Release: 1999
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9781888998641

� Essential reading for finance directors and corporate treasurers � Gives detailed information on recently developed controls such as interest rate hedging If cash, as every manager knows, is the life blood of a business then managing cash flow, interest rates and banking relations are among the vital functions of treasury management in any business. Managing Corporate Liquidity is a practical and concise guide offering advice and insight into the fundamental decisions of liquidity management that managers have to make. It takes into full account the increased use of liquidity instruments, looking in detail at interest rate hedging and additional control mechanisms which have been developed in recent years. This book is especially targeted to finance directors, corporate treasurers, and managers--in fact, everyone within a business who should be aware of the cash flow implications of their actions.

Managing Corporate Liquidity

Managing Corporate Liquidity
Author: Lance Moir
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 207
Release: 2014-06-11
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1135951861

Cash, as every manager knows, is the life-blood of a business. Managing cash flow, interest rates, and banking relations are some of the most important functions of treasury management. Managing Corporate Liquidity is a practical and concise guide designed specifically to offer advice and insight into the fundamental decisions of liquidity management. This book also takes into account the increased use of liquidity instruments, looking in detail at interest-rate hedging and the various control mechanisms that have been developed in recent years. An essential guide for treasury managers, financial managers at all levels, and entrepreneurs, business owners, and their advisers.