840 research outputs found
The short term debt vs. long term debt puzzle: a model for the optimal mix
This paper argues that the existing finance literature is inadequate with respect to its coverage of capital structure of small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs). In particular it is argued that the cost of equity (being both conceptually ill defined and empirically non quantifiable) is not applicable to the capital structure decisions for a large proportion of SMEs and the optimal capital structure depends only on the mix of short and long term debt. The paper then presents a model, developed by practitioners for optimising the debt mix and demonstrates its practical application using an Italian firm's debt structure as a case study
Establishing a new UK finance escalator for innovative SMEs: the roles of the Enterprise Capital Funds and Angel Co-investment Fund
This paper examines UK public policy addressing the seed and early stage equity finance gap since the Global Financial Crisis (GFC). Drawing on lessons learned from recent studies of UK and international government equity schemes, two contemporary models of government backed equity finance are examined. The focus is on the Enterprise Capital Funds (ECFs) and the Angel Co-investment Fund (ACF), the UK government’s main schemes operating in the sub-£2m equity finance gap to address the capital requirements for developing the UK’s young, potential high growth businesses.
The paper highlights the shortcomings of traditional interim fund performance analysis and presents current demand and supply side evidence that establishes that these schemes are making attributable impacts on their portfolio businesses and the wider UK economy. It also demonstrates that they are playing important roles in the establishment of a new post GFC UK finance escalator. However, whilst these schemes were found to be currently complementary and effective, their future roles within the UK’s evolving post GFC seed and early stage equity markets are also considered.
Key Words: Government Equity Schemes, Venture Capital, Potential High Growth SME
Determinantes Nacionais e Setoriais da Estrutura de Capital na América Latina
This study identified the role of the national environment (the Macroeconomy, Financial Development and
Institutional Quality) and industry characteristics (Munificence, Dynamism, Concentration, Life Cycle,
Technological Efficiency Dispersion, Product Quality Dispersion, Customer Bargaining Power and Supplier
Bargaining Power) on debt of 612 listed companies from 7 Latin American countries (Argentina, Brazil, Chile,
Colombia, Mexico, Peru and Venezuela). For comparison purposes, the analysis is also extended to 847 U.S.
companies. The period of study is 1996-2009 and the analysis employed a Hierarchical Linear Model, which
controls the effects according to the level of the variables (country, industry, time and firm). The results suggest
that Financial Development eases access to external funds and Institutional Quality is negatively related to firm
Leverage. The research also finds evidence that institutional quality can promote asymmetrical development
between stock markets and credit markets
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A survey of shipping finance research: setting the future research agenda
Financing shipping related investment projects has always been a focal area of debate and research within the international maritime industry since access to funding can determine the competitiveness of a capital-intensive business as well as its success or failure under adverse market conditions. This paper provides, for the first time, a comprehensive and structured survey of all published research in the area of shipping finance and investment. The review spans approximately four decades (1979-2018) of empirical evidence, including 162 studies published in 48 scholarly journals, complemented with select books and book chapters. The study provides a bibliometric analysis and comprehensive synthesis of existing research offering an invaluable source of information for both the academic community and business practice, shaping the future research agenda in shipping finance and investment
The Impact of Intergenerational Transfers on Household Wealth Inequality in Japan and the United States
The effect of ownership structure on leverage decision: new evidence from Chinese listed firms
O desempenho de grandes empresas do BRIC, EUA, Japão e Alemanha: uma comparação com base na geração de valor
Risk management and the cost of equity: evidence from the United Kingdom’s non-life insurance market
The 'Fed Model' and the Changing Correlation of Stock and Bond Returns: An Equilibrium Approach
Leisure and Housing Consumption after Retirement: New Evidence on the Life-Cycle Hypothesis
We revisit the alleged retirement consumption puzzle. According to the life-cycle theory, foreseeable income reductions such as those around retirement should not affect consumption. However, we first recall that given higher leisure endowments after retirement, the theory does predict a fall of total market consumption expenditures. In order not to mistake this predicted drop for a puzzle we focus on housing consumption which can be plausibly regarded as complementary to leisure, and we control for the leisure change in our empirical specifications, using micro data for Germany (SOEP), where housing expenditures are observable as rents for the majority (60%), as well as dwelling relocations. We still find significant negative impacts of the retirement status on housing consumption, which is hard to reconcile with the life-cycle theory. For retirees we also find significant effects of the income reduction at retirement on housing. However, the effects are small in quantitative terms, given the lock-in nature of past housing decisions
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