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Loews Philadelphia, Commonwealth Hall C
Hosted By:
American Finance Association
Corporate Liquidity
Paper Session
Sunday, Jan. 7, 2018 10:15 AM - 12:15 PM
- Chair: Michael Roberts, University of Pennsylvania
Firm Selection and Corporate Cash Holdings
Abstract
Among stock market entrants, more firms over time are R&D–intensive with initially lower profitability but higher growth potential. This sample-selection effect determines the secular trend in U.S. public firms’ cash holdings. A stylized firm industry model allows us to analyze two competing changes to the selection mechanism: a change in industry composition and a shift toward less profitable R&D–firms. The latter is key to generating higher cash ratios at IPO, necessary for the secular increase, whereas the former mechanism amplifies this effect. The data confirm the prominent role played by selection, and corroborate the model’s predictions.Funding Liquidity Without Banks: Evidence From a Shock to the Cost of Very Short-term Debt
Abstract
In 2011, Colombia instituted a tax on repayment of bank loans, thereby increasing the cost of short-term bank credit more than long-term credit. Firms responded by cutting their short-term loans for liquidity management purposes and increasing their use of cash and trade credit. In industries where trade credit is more accessible (based on U.S. Compustat firms), we find substitution into accounts payable and little effect on cash and investment. Where trade credit is less available, firms increase cash and cut investment. Thus, trade credit offers a substitute source of liquidity that can insulate some firms from bank liquidity shocks.Discussant(s)
Joao Gomes
,
University of Pennsylvania
Sheridan Titman
,
University of Texas-Austin
Mitchell Petersen
,
Northwestern University
JEL Classifications
- G3 - Corporate Finance and Governance