We build a model of debt for firms with investment projects for which flexibility and free cash flow problems are important issues. We focus on the factors that lead the firm to select the zero-debt policy. Our model provides an explanation of the so-called "zero-leverage puzzle" (Strebulaev and Yang (2013)). It also helps to explain why zero-debt firms often pay higher dividends compared to other firms. In addition, the model generates new empirical predictions that have not yet been tested. For example, it predicts that firms with zero-debt policy should be influenced by free cash flow considerations more than by bankruptcy cost considerations. Also the choice of zero-debt policy can be used by high-quality firms to signal their quality. ...
We model the interplay between cash and debt policies in the presence of financial constraints. Whil...
The Federal Reserve’s recent, unprecedented corporate debt purchases will further reduce the cost of...
Traditional theories of capital structure do not explain the puzzling phenomena of zero-leverage fir...
We build a model of debt for firms with investment projects, for which flexibility and free cash flo...
This study is focused on gaps in the theory of capital structure research regarding the phenomenon ...
This article provides empirical evidence on the zero-leverage phenomenon for a sample of European li...
This paper investigates the effects of credit rating downgrades, equity mispricing, and CEO overconf...
Using a sample of up to 12023 firm-year observations across 2358 individual firms from 2007 to 2013,...
We model the interplay between cash and debt policies in the presence of financial constraints. Whil...
We model the interplay between cash and debt policies in the presence of financial constraints. Whil...
Purpose – The purpose of the study is to examine the zero-leverage (ZL) phenomenon in family and non...
This paper addresses the zero-leverage puzzle, the observation that many firms do not issue debt and...
This paper addresses the following unresolved questions: Why do some firms issue equity instead of d...
We present a cash-flow based model of corporate debt valuation that incorporates two novel features....
This paper examines the interaction between investment and financing decisions of a firm using a rea...
We model the interplay between cash and debt policies in the presence of financial constraints. Whil...
The Federal Reserve’s recent, unprecedented corporate debt purchases will further reduce the cost of...
Traditional theories of capital structure do not explain the puzzling phenomena of zero-leverage fir...
We build a model of debt for firms with investment projects, for which flexibility and free cash flo...
This study is focused on gaps in the theory of capital structure research regarding the phenomenon ...
This article provides empirical evidence on the zero-leverage phenomenon for a sample of European li...
This paper investigates the effects of credit rating downgrades, equity mispricing, and CEO overconf...
Using a sample of up to 12023 firm-year observations across 2358 individual firms from 2007 to 2013,...
We model the interplay between cash and debt policies in the presence of financial constraints. Whil...
We model the interplay between cash and debt policies in the presence of financial constraints. Whil...
Purpose – The purpose of the study is to examine the zero-leverage (ZL) phenomenon in family and non...
This paper addresses the zero-leverage puzzle, the observation that many firms do not issue debt and...
This paper addresses the following unresolved questions: Why do some firms issue equity instead of d...
We present a cash-flow based model of corporate debt valuation that incorporates two novel features....
This paper examines the interaction between investment and financing decisions of a firm using a rea...
We model the interplay between cash and debt policies in the presence of financial constraints. Whil...
The Federal Reserve’s recent, unprecedented corporate debt purchases will further reduce the cost of...
Traditional theories of capital structure do not explain the puzzling phenomena of zero-leverage fir...