2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.jfineco.2013.02.006
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Market timing, investment, and risk management

Abstract: Firms face uncertain financing conditions, which can be quite severe as exemplified by the recent financial crisis. We capture the firm's precautionary cash hoarding and market timing motives in a tractable model of dynamic corporate financial management when external financing conditions are stochastic. Firms value financial slack and build cash reserves to mitigate financial constraints. The finitely-lived favorable financing condition induces them to rationally time the equity market. This market timing mot… Show more

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Cited by 317 publications
(107 citation statements)
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References 72 publications
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“…They clarified that, if institutional purchases do not achieve such returns, value issuance will demonstrate a small effect by stock cost increments. This hypothesis reveals that it is more plausible for organizations to issue new stock when the business sector quality is higher than the book estimation of their stock (Bolton et al, 2013). This budgetary conduct implies that organizations lean towards outside financing when the expense is low.…”
Section: Market-timing Theorymentioning
confidence: 98%
“…They clarified that, if institutional purchases do not achieve such returns, value issuance will demonstrate a small effect by stock cost increments. This hypothesis reveals that it is more plausible for organizations to issue new stock when the business sector quality is higher than the book estimation of their stock (Bolton et al, 2013). This budgetary conduct implies that organizations lean towards outside financing when the expense is low.…”
Section: Market-timing Theorymentioning
confidence: 98%
“…When the actual return receive is greater than what was expected, investors are happy. On the other hand, investors, companies, and financial managers are more likely to be worried with the possibility that the actual return is less than the expected return [26,27]. Therefore, a risky investment is one where there is a significant possibility of its actual returns being lower or higher than its expected returns.…”
Section: Riskmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…But there is an important difference between corporate cash management and foreign exchange reserve management. When a corporation's cash holdings reach the point where the marginal corporate value of cash equals the after‐tax value of cash to shareholders, it is optimal for the corporation to pay out a dividend (Bolton, Chen, and Wang (, , )). There is no exact analog for a dividend payout for the holders of a nation's currency, which raises the question of what a payout means for a nation that has accumulated excessively large foreign exchange reserves.…”
Section: The Bolton and Huang () Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%