scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Topic

Pecking order theory

About: Pecking order theory is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 1334 publications have been published within this topic receiving 40521 citations.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that if managers possess inside information about the activities of firms, then the choice of a managerial incentive schedule and of a financial structure signals information to the market, and in competitive equilibrium the inferences drawn from the signals will be validated.
Abstract: The Modigliani-Miller theorem on the irrelevancy of financial structure implicitly assumes that the market possesses full information about the activities of firms. If managers possess inside information, however, then the choice of a managerial incentive schedule and of a financial structure signals information to the market, and in competitive equilibrium the inferences drawn from the signals will be validated. One empirical implication of this theory is that in a cross section, the values of firms will rise with leverage, since increasing leverage increases the market's perception of value.

3,759 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The pecking-order model of finance as mentioned in this paper predicts that firms with more investments have lower long-term dividend payouts, while firms with fewer investments have higher dividend payout, which is consistent with the trade-off model and complex pecking order model.
Abstract: Confirming predictions shared by the trade-off and pecking order models, more profitable firms and firms with fewer investments have higher dividend payouts. Confirming the pecking order model but contradicting the trade-off model, more profitable firms are less levered. Firms with more investments have less market leverage, which is consistent with the trade-off model and a complex pecking order model. Firms with more investments have lower long-term dividend payouts, but dividends do not vary to accommodate shortterm variation in investment. As the pecking order model predicts, short-term variation in investment and earnings is mostly absorbed by debt. The finance literature offers two competing models of financing decisions. In the trade-off model, firms identify their optimal leverage by weighing the costs and benefits of an additional dollar of debt. The benefits of debt include, for example, the tax deductibility of interest and the reduction of free cash flow problems. The costs of debt include potential bankruptcy costs and agency conflicts between stockholders and bondholders. At the leverage optimum, the benefit of the last dollar of debt just offsets the cost. The tradeoff model makes a similar prediction about dividends. Firms maximize value by selecting the dividend payout that equates the costs and benefits of the last dollar of dividends. Myers (1984) develops an alternative theory known as the pecking order model of financing decisions. The pecking order arises if the costs of issuing new securities overwhelm other costs and benefits of dividends and debt. The financing costs that produce pecking order behavior include the transaction costs associated with new issues and the costs that arise because of management’s superior information about the firm’s prospects and the value of its risky securities. Because of these costs, firms finance new investments first with retained earnings, then with safe debt, then with risky debt, and finally, under duress, with equity. As a result, variation in a firm’s leverage

2,523 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the static trade-off theory of corporate leverage is tested against the pecking order theory of Corporate leverage, using a broad cross-section of US firms over the period 1980-1998, and robust evidence of mean reversion in leverage is found.
Abstract: The pecking order theory of corporate leverage is tested against the static tradeoff theory of corporate leverage, using a broad cross-section of US firms over the period 1980-1998. A derivation of the conditional target adjustment framework is provided as a better empirical test of mean reversion. None of the predictions of the pecking order theory hold in the data. As predicted by the static tradeoff theory, robust evidence of mean reversion in leverage is found. This is true both unconditionally and conditionally on financial factors. Leverage is more persistent at lower levels than at higher levels. When debt matures, it is not replaced dollar for dollar by new debt and so leverage declines. Large firms increase their debt in order to support the payment of dividends. By contrast, small firms reduce their debt while they pay dividends.

2,222 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors showed that firms with more investments have lower long-term dividend payouts, while firms with fewer investments are less levered, consistent with the tradeoff model and a complex pecking order model.
Abstract: Confirming predictions shared by the tradeoff and pecking order models, more profitable firms and firms with fewer investments have higher dividend payouts. Confirming the pecking order model but contradicting the tradeoff model, more profitable firms are less levered. Firms with more investments have less market leverage, which is consistent with the tradeoff model and a complex pecking order model. Firms with more investments have lower long-term dividend payouts, but dividends do not vary to accommodate short-term variation in investment. As the pecking order model predicts, short-term variation in investment and earnings is mostly absorbed by debt.

2,074 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compare traditional capital structure models against the alternative of a pecking order model of corporate financing, which predicts external debt financing driven by the internal financial deficit, has much greater time-series explanatory power than a static trade-off model which predicts that each firm adjusts gradually toward an optimal debt ratio.

1,805 citations


Network Information
Related Topics (5)
Corporate social responsibility
45.5K papers, 1M citations
78% related
Stock market
44K papers, 1M citations
78% related
Competitive advantage
46.6K papers, 1.5M citations
76% related
Entrepreneurship
71.7K papers, 1.7M citations
75% related
Interest rate
47K papers, 1M citations
74% related
Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202326
202260
202153
202087
201993
201888