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Journal ArticleDOI

Mean reversion in corporate leverage: evidence from India

Gaurav Singh Chauhan, +1 more
- 09 Sep 2019 - 
- Vol. 45, Iss: 9, pp 1183-1198
TLDR
In this paper, the authors make use of a major "shock" to the debt ratios as an event and think of a subsequent reversion as a movement toward a mean or target debt ratio.
Abstract
Recent papers on target capital structure show that debt ratio seems to vary widely in space and time, implying that the functional specifications of target debt ratios are of little empirical use. Further, target behavior cannot be adjudged correctly using debt ratios, as they could revert due to mechanical reasons. The purpose of this paper is to develop an alternative testing strategy to test the target capital structure.,The authors make use of a major “shock” to the debt ratios as an event and think of a subsequent reversion as a movement toward a mean or target debt ratio. By doing this, the authors no longer need to identify target debt ratios as a function of firm-specific variables or any other rigid functional form.,Similar to the broad empirical evidence in developed economies, there is no perceptible and systematic mean reversion by Indian firms. However, unlike developed countries, proportionate usage of debt to finance firms’ marginal financing deficits is extensive; equity is used rather sparingly.,The trade-off theory could be convincingly refuted at least for the emerging market of India. The paper here stimulated further research on finding reasons for specific financing behavior of emerging market firms.,The results show that the firms’ financing choices are not only depending on their own firm’s specific variables but also on the financial markets in which they operate.,This study attempts to assess mean reversion in debt ratios in a unique but reassuring manner. The results are confirmed by extensive calibration of the testing strategy using simulated data sets.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

How Stable Are Corporate Capital Structures

Clifford S. Ang
- 01 Jul 2015 - 
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Back to the Beginning: Persistence and the Cross‐Section of Corporate Capital Structure

TL;DR: This paper found that the majority of variation in leverage ratios is driven by an unobserved time-invariant effect that generates surprisingly stable capital structures: high (low) levered firms tend to remain as such for over two decades.
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Do Firms Rebalance Their Capital Structures

TL;DR: The authors empirically examined whether firms engage in a dynamic rebalancing of their capital structures while allowing for costly adjustment and found that firms actively rebalance their leverage to stay within an optimal range.
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Testing Theories of Capital Structure and Estimating the Speed of Adjustment

TL;DR: This article examined time-series patterns of external financing decisions and showed that publicly traded U.S. firms fund a much larger proportion of their financing deficit with external equity when the cost of equity capital is low.
Journal ArticleDOI

An EBIT-Based Model of Dynamic Capital Structure

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors take the claim to future EBIT as the underlying state variable, and assume that it is invariant to changes in capital structure, and treat all claims to EBIT (equity, debt, government) in a consistent fashion.
Journal ArticleDOI

Do Tests of Capital Structure Theory Mean What They Say

TL;DR: In this article, a calibrated dynamic trade-off model with adjustment costs is used to simulate firms' capital structure paths and the results of standard cross-sectional tests on this data are found to be qualitatively and quantitatively consistent with those reported in the empirical literature.
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