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"Cash management."
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Cash is surprisingly valuable as a strategic asset
2014
Academics, politicians, and journalists are often highly critical of U.S. firms for holding too much cash. Cash holdings are stockpiled free-cash flow and incur substantial opportunity costs from the perspectives of economics. However, behavioral theory highlights the benefits of cash holdings as fungible slack resources facilitating adaptive advantages. We use the countervailing forces embodied in these two theories to hypothesize and test a quadratic functional relationship of returns to cash measured by Tobin's q. We also build and test a related novel hypothesis of scale-dependent returns to cash based on the competitive strategy concept of strategic deterrence. Tests for both of these hypotheses are positive and show that returns to cash continue to increase far beyond transactional needs.
Journal Article
Why Do U.S. Firms Hold So Much More Cash than They Used To?
by
BATES, THOMAS W.
,
KAHLE, KATHLEEN M.
,
STULZ, RENÉ M.
in
Book value
,
Business structures
,
Capital expenditures
2009
The average cash-to-assets ratio for U.S. industrial firms more than doubles from 1980 to 2006. A measure of the economic importance of this increase is that at the end of the sample period, the average firm can retire all debt obligations with its cash holdings. Cash ratios increase because firms' cash flows become riskier. In addition, firms change: They hold fewer inventories and receivables and are increasingly R&D intensive. While the precautionary motive for cash holdings plays an important role in explaining the increase in cash ratios, we find no consistent evidence that agency conflicts contribute to the increase.
Journal Article
Cash flow for dummies
This hands-on guide is your plain-English manual to cash flow basics. You'll get valuable tips, techniques, and information on the fundamentals of cash management to maximize cash flow and understand how it affects the quality of your company's earnings.
Aggregate Risk and the Choice between Cash and Lines of Credit
by
CAMPELLO, MURILLO
,
ALMEIDA, HEITOR
,
ACHARYA, VIRAL V.
in
1987-2008
,
Bank credit
,
Bank liquidity
2013
Banks can create liquidity for firms by pooling their idiosyncratic risks. As a result, bank lines of credit to firms with greater aggregate risk should be costlier and such firms opt for cash in spite of the incurred liquidity premium. We find empirical support for this novel theoretical insight. Firms with higher beta have a higher ratio of cash to credit lines and face greater costs on their lines. In times of heightened aggregate volatility, banks exposed to undrawn credit lines become riskier; bank credit lines feature fewer initiations, higher spreads, and shorter maturity; and, firms' cash reserves rise.
Journal Article
Cash Holdings and Credit Risk
by
Strebulaev, Ilya A.
,
Davydenko, Sergei A.
,
Acharya, Viral
in
1996-2010
,
Acid test ratios
,
Betriebliche Liquidität
2012
Intuition suggests that firms with higher cash holdings should be \"safer\" and have lower credit spreads. Yet empirically, the correlation between cash and spreads is robustly positive. This puzzling finding can be explained by the precautionary motive for saving cash, which in our model causes riskier firms to accumulate higher cash reserves. In contrast, spreads are negatively related to the part of cash holdings that is not determined by credit risk factors. Similarly, although firms with higher cash reserves are less likely to default in the short term, endogenously determined liquidity may be related positively to the longerterm probability of default. Our empirical analysis confirms these predictions, suggesting that precautionary savings are central to understanding the effects of cash on credit risk.
Journal Article
CSR Performance and the Value of Cash Holdings: International Evidence
by
Pijourlet, Guillaume
,
Arouri, Mohamed
in
Business administration
,
Business and Management
,
Business Ethics
2017
Using a worldwide sample, we examine whether corporate social responsibility (CSR) performance has an impact on the value of cash holdings. We find that investors assign a higher value to cash held by firms that have a high CSR rating. This result is consistent with the idea that CSR policies are a means for managers to act in the shareholders' interests by mitigating conflicts with stakeholders. Finally, we reveal that CSR performance has a positive impact on the value of cash holdings only for firms which operate in countries where shareholders are well protected from expropriation by managers and in countries where the institutional quality is high.
Journal Article