Dynamic Capital Structure: Dynamics, Determinants and Speed of Adjustment

The corporate finance literature has focused on explaining the determinants of firms target capital structure and speed of adjustment using the well-established theories such as pecking order, signaling and trade-off theories. However, less attention has been paid to understanding the financing behavior of farm businesses using these theories. Unlike corporate firms with professional management, farm businesses are different in a way that family members participate in management, the owner is often the manager, the decision-making unit is small, and farms heavily depend on government subsidies to stabilize income. These distinctive setting in farm business may result in different patterns of capital structure decision-making. Hence, we evaluate the application of corporate finance theories in the context of understanding the relationship between target capital structure and profit in the farm business.We use a dynamic partial adjustment model to examine the determinants of capital structure and speed of adjustment, and detect capital structure theories with which the leverage ratio of farm business would comply. Our sample comprises a panel of 1500 Dutch farms over the years 2001 to 2015.We find strong evidence that farms prefer internal funds to external funds. Profit is negatively related to leverage, supporting the pecking order theory, which has often been rejected for large firms. Consistent with the signaling theory, we find that size is positively related to leverage. Farm asset structure, growth, investment, and earnings volatility significantly determine the target capital structure. An interesting finding is that farm leverage is highly persistent and that lagged leverage is the best predictor of subsequent leverage ratios. Also, farms appear to have target leverage ratio and are reported to adjust their leverage towards the optimal level. The speed of adjustment to the target capital ranges from 8.6% to 63%, and varies by farm size and farm. This evidence further confirms the existence of dynamics in the farm capital structure decision. This article provides insights to understanding the dynamic nature of farm capital structure and the applicability of capital structure theories in the farm business.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tamirat, A.S., Trujillo Barrera, A.A., Pennings, J.M.E.
Format: Article in monograph or in proceedings biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:Adjustment speed, Dynamic partial adjustment model, Farm business, Target capital structure,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/dynamic-capital-structure-dynamics-determinants-and-speed-of-adju
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-533026
record_format koha
spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-5330262024-06-25 Tamirat, A.S. Trujillo Barrera, A.A. Pennings, J.M.E. Article in monograph or in proceedings Dynamic Capital Structure: Dynamics, Determinants and Speed of Adjustment 2017 The corporate finance literature has focused on explaining the determinants of firms target capital structure and speed of adjustment using the well-established theories such as pecking order, signaling and trade-off theories. However, less attention has been paid to understanding the financing behavior of farm businesses using these theories. Unlike corporate firms with professional management, farm businesses are different in a way that family members participate in management, the owner is often the manager, the decision-making unit is small, and farms heavily depend on government subsidies to stabilize income. These distinctive setting in farm business may result in different patterns of capital structure decision-making. Hence, we evaluate the application of corporate finance theories in the context of understanding the relationship between target capital structure and profit in the farm business.We use a dynamic partial adjustment model to examine the determinants of capital structure and speed of adjustment, and detect capital structure theories with which the leverage ratio of farm business would comply. Our sample comprises a panel of 1500 Dutch farms over the years 2001 to 2015.We find strong evidence that farms prefer internal funds to external funds. Profit is negatively related to leverage, supporting the pecking order theory, which has often been rejected for large firms. Consistent with the signaling theory, we find that size is positively related to leverage. Farm asset structure, growth, investment, and earnings volatility significantly determine the target capital structure. An interesting finding is that farm leverage is highly persistent and that lagged leverage is the best predictor of subsequent leverage ratios. Also, farms appear to have target leverage ratio and are reported to adjust their leverage towards the optimal level. The speed of adjustment to the target capital ranges from 8.6% to 63%, and varies by farm size and farm. This evidence further confirms the existence of dynamics in the farm capital structure decision. This article provides insights to understanding the dynamic nature of farm capital structure and the applicability of capital structure theories in the farm business. en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/dynamic-capital-structure-dynamics-determinants-and-speed-of-adju https://edepot.wur.nl/440184 Adjustment speed Dynamic partial adjustment model Farm business Target capital structure Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic Adjustment speed
Dynamic partial adjustment model
Farm business
Target capital structure
Adjustment speed
Dynamic partial adjustment model
Farm business
Target capital structure
spellingShingle Adjustment speed
Dynamic partial adjustment model
Farm business
Target capital structure
Adjustment speed
Dynamic partial adjustment model
Farm business
Target capital structure
Tamirat, A.S.
Trujillo Barrera, A.A.
Pennings, J.M.E.
Dynamic Capital Structure: Dynamics, Determinants and Speed of Adjustment
description The corporate finance literature has focused on explaining the determinants of firms target capital structure and speed of adjustment using the well-established theories such as pecking order, signaling and trade-off theories. However, less attention has been paid to understanding the financing behavior of farm businesses using these theories. Unlike corporate firms with professional management, farm businesses are different in a way that family members participate in management, the owner is often the manager, the decision-making unit is small, and farms heavily depend on government subsidies to stabilize income. These distinctive setting in farm business may result in different patterns of capital structure decision-making. Hence, we evaluate the application of corporate finance theories in the context of understanding the relationship between target capital structure and profit in the farm business.We use a dynamic partial adjustment model to examine the determinants of capital structure and speed of adjustment, and detect capital structure theories with which the leverage ratio of farm business would comply. Our sample comprises a panel of 1500 Dutch farms over the years 2001 to 2015.We find strong evidence that farms prefer internal funds to external funds. Profit is negatively related to leverage, supporting the pecking order theory, which has often been rejected for large firms. Consistent with the signaling theory, we find that size is positively related to leverage. Farm asset structure, growth, investment, and earnings volatility significantly determine the target capital structure. An interesting finding is that farm leverage is highly persistent and that lagged leverage is the best predictor of subsequent leverage ratios. Also, farms appear to have target leverage ratio and are reported to adjust their leverage towards the optimal level. The speed of adjustment to the target capital ranges from 8.6% to 63%, and varies by farm size and farm. This evidence further confirms the existence of dynamics in the farm capital structure decision. This article provides insights to understanding the dynamic nature of farm capital structure and the applicability of capital structure theories in the farm business.
format Article in monograph or in proceedings
topic_facet Adjustment speed
Dynamic partial adjustment model
Farm business
Target capital structure
author Tamirat, A.S.
Trujillo Barrera, A.A.
Pennings, J.M.E.
author_facet Tamirat, A.S.
Trujillo Barrera, A.A.
Pennings, J.M.E.
author_sort Tamirat, A.S.
title Dynamic Capital Structure: Dynamics, Determinants and Speed of Adjustment
title_short Dynamic Capital Structure: Dynamics, Determinants and Speed of Adjustment
title_full Dynamic Capital Structure: Dynamics, Determinants and Speed of Adjustment
title_fullStr Dynamic Capital Structure: Dynamics, Determinants and Speed of Adjustment
title_full_unstemmed Dynamic Capital Structure: Dynamics, Determinants and Speed of Adjustment
title_sort dynamic capital structure: dynamics, determinants and speed of adjustment
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/dynamic-capital-structure-dynamics-determinants-and-speed-of-adju
work_keys_str_mv AT tamiratas dynamiccapitalstructuredynamicsdeterminantsandspeedofadjustment
AT trujillobarreraaa dynamiccapitalstructuredynamicsdeterminantsandspeedofadjustment
AT penningsjme dynamiccapitalstructuredynamicsdeterminantsandspeedofadjustment
_version_ 1813199396805804032