1997
DOI: 10.1111/1468-5957.00154
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The Impact of Dividends, Debt and Investment on Valuation Models

Abstract: The reliability of a basic earnings and equity model of value is tested using 8,287 cases drawn from UK industrial and commercial firms reporting during 1987-1995. A respecification of this model is used to investigate the value relevance of dividends, capital structure and capital expenditure. Both the dividend and capital expenditure signals appear to be significant and the impact of the former is surprisingly strong. There is no convincing evidence that equity value is affected by the level of debt. Further… Show more

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Cited by 141 publications
(181 citation statements)
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References 31 publications
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“…The association studies typically model these relationships either in the spirit of residual income (Ohlson 1995;Rees 1997;Hand and Landsman 2005), or the option-style valuation framework (Burgstahler and Dichev 1997;Wysocki 1998;Ashton et al 2003).…”
Section: Test Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The association studies typically model these relationships either in the spirit of residual income (Ohlson 1995;Rees 1997;Hand and Landsman 2005), or the option-style valuation framework (Burgstahler and Dichev 1997;Wysocki 1998;Ashton et al 2003).…”
Section: Test Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite the conceptual differences, both theoretical frameworks are often translated into the same empirical model, whereby equity market value is regressed on book value, earnings and, often, additional control variables (Rees 1997;Burgstahler and Dichev 1997;Hand and Landsman 2005). In the RIV context, this is normally achieved through such simplifying assumptions as constant growth rates for earnings and book value (Rees 1997), or linear information dynamics of the formation of expectations (Ohlson 1995;Hand and Landsman 2005).…”
Section: Test Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The reasons for excluding financial firms, property companies or investment trusts are not always clearly stated, although Rees (1997Rees ( , p. 1123 explaining the cross-sectional variation in the market-to-book ratio (and produce coefficients which are not inconsistent with theoretical predictions) for financial firms (Ohlson, 1995).…”
Section: Prior Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A second model also differentiates between that proportion of earnings distributed as dividends and that retained. Following Rees (1997) and Fama and French (1998), this is interpreted as a partitioning of earnings into relatively permanent and relatively transitory components. The models are deflated by book value to mitigate heteroscedasticity.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%