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Operating cash flow

About: Operating cash flow is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 5370 publications have been published within this topic receiving 172894 citations. The topic is also known as: OCF & CFO.


Papers
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Posted Content
TL;DR: In this paper, the benefits of debt in reducing agency costs of free cash flows, how debt can substitute for dividends, why diversification programs are more likely to generate losses than takeovers or expansion in the same line of business or liquidationmotivated takeovers, and why the factors generating takeover activity in such diverse activities as broadcasting and tobacco are similar to those in oil.
Abstract: The interests and incentives of managers and shareholders conflict over such issues as the optimal size of the firm and the payment of cash to shareholders. These conflicts are especially severe in firms with large free cash flows—more cash than profitable investment opportunities. The theory developed here explains 1) the benefits of debt in reducing agency costs of free cash flows, 2) how debt can substitute for dividends, 3) why “diversification” programs are more likely to generate losses than takeovers or expansion in the same line of business or liquidationmotivated takeovers, 4) why the factors generating takeover activity in such diverse activities as broadcasting and tobacco are similar to those in oil, and 5) why bidders and some targets tend to perform abnormally well prior to takeover.

14,368 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a new measure of one aspect of the quality of accruals and earnings, which is the residual from firm-specific regressions of changes in working capital on past, present, and future operating cash flow realizations.
Abstract: This paper suggests a new measure of one aspect of the quality of accruals and earnings. The major benefit of accruals is to reduce timing and mismatching problems in the underlying cash flows. However, accruals accomplish this benefit at the cost of making assumptions and estimates about future cash flows, which implies that accruals include errors of estimation or noise. Since estimation noise reduces the beneficial role of accruals, this study suggests that the quality of accruals and earnings is decreasing in the magnitude of estimation noise in accruals. More specifically, we develop a simple model of working capital accruals where accruals correct the timing problems in cash flows at the cost of including errors in estimation. Based on the model, we derive an empirical measure of accrual quality as the residual from firm-specific regressions of changes in working capital on past, present, and future operating cash flow realizations. The study concludes with two empirical applications that illustrate the usefulness of our measure of accrual quality. First, we explore the relation of accrual quality to economic fundamentals. We find that accrual quality is negatively related to the magnitude of total accruals, length of the operating cycle, and the standard deviation of sales, cash flows, and earnings, while it is positively related to firm size. Second, we show a strong positive relation between accrual quality and earnings persistence.

3,698 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors analyze a firm owned by atomistic shareholders who observe neither cash flows nor management's investment decisions and find that management is forced to invest too little when cash flow is low and too much when it is high.

3,687 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: The authors investigated whether stock prices reflect information about future earnings contained in the accrual and cash flow components of current earnings, and found that stock prices act as if investors "fixate" on earnings, failing to fully reflect information in the accrued and uncounted components until it impacts future earnings.
Abstract: This paper investigates whether stock prices reflect information about future earnings contained in the accrual and cash flow components of current earnings. The extent to which current earnings performance persists into the future is shown to depend on the relative magnitudes of the cash and accrual components of current earnings. However, stock prices are found to act as if investors "fixate" on earnings, failing to fully reflect information in the accrual and cash flow components of current earnings until it impacts future earnings.

3,218 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors assume that outside investors have imperfect information about firms' profitability and that cash dividends are taxed at a higher rate than capital gains, and they derive a comparative static result that relates the equilibrium level of dividend payout to the length of investors' planning horizons.
Abstract: This paper assumes that outside investors have imperfect information about firms' profitability and that cash dividends are taxed at a higher rate than capital gains. It is shown that under these conditions, such dividends function as a signal of expected cash flows. By structuring the model so that finite-lived investors turn over continuing projects to succeeding generations of investors, we derive a comparative static result that relates the equilibrium level of dividend payout to the length of investors' planning horizons.

2,681 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202355
2022169
202172
202083
201986
2018118