Capital Structure: The Emprical Investigation of Market Timing Theory

This paper investigated the effect of Market Timing Theory on capital structure. We examined capital structure to past market valuations. The firms with low leverage tend to financed when their valuations were high, as measured by the market-to-book ratio (MTB). The firms with high leverage tend to...

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Autores principales: Gholamreza Kordestani, Tannaz Pirdavari
Formato: article
Lenguaje:FA
Publicado: Shahid Bahonar University of Kerman 2012
Materias:
mtb
Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/089f0240f8a8421aac4f76b6c3757ce4
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Sumario:This paper investigated the effect of Market Timing Theory on capital structure. We examined capital structure to past market valuations. The firms with low leverage tend to financed when their valuations were high, as measured by the market-to-book ratio (MTB). The firms with high leverage tend to be those that raised funds when their valuations were low. Temporary changes in market-to-book lead to permanent changes in capital structure and temporary increases in market-to-book lead to permanent increases in cash balances. Then the results are also difficult to reconcile with the pecking order and trade-off theory. The results are consistent with the theory that capital structure is the cumulative outcome of a series of market-timing-motivated financing decisions.We analysed data of 101 firms listed in Tehran Stock Exchange in periods 1378-1386. The result shows that Capital Structure is not consistent with Market Timing Theory.