Are Corporations Reducing or Taking Risks with Derivatives?
Article Abstract:
Public discussion about corporate use of derivatives focuses on whether firms use derivatives to reduce or increase firm risk. In contrast, empirical academic studies of corporate derivatives use take it for granted that firms hedge with derivatives. Using data from financial statements of 425 large U.S. corporations, we investigate whether firms systematically reduce or increase their riskiness with derivatives. We find that many firms manage their exposures with large derivatives positions. Nonetheless, compared to firms that do not use financial derivatives, firms that use derivatives display few, if any, measurable differences in risk that are associated with the use of derivatives.
Publication Name: Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis
Subject: Business
ISSN: 0022-1090
Year: 2001
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
The Debt-Equity Choice
Article Abstract:
When firms adjust their capital structures, they tend to move toward a target debt ratio that is consistent with theories based on tradeoffs between the costs and benefits of debt. In contrast to previous empirical work, our tests explicitly account for the fact that firms may face impediments to movements toward their target ratio, and that the target ratio may change over time as the firm's profitability and stock price change. A separate analysis of the size of the issue and repurchase transactions suggests that the deviation between the actual and the target ratios plays a more important role in the repurchase decision than in the issuance decision.
Publication Name: Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis
Subject: Business
ISSN: 0022-1090
Year: 2001
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Another Look at Mutual Fund Tournaments
Article Abstract:
Daily returns are used to examine how mutual funds actively alter the risk of their portfolios in response to past performance. Compared to monthly data, daily returns produce much more efficient estimates of fund volatility, which give vastly different inferences about the behavior of fund managers. In particular, monthly results consistent with under-performers increasing their risk relative to better performing funds disappear with daily data. The differences in the monthly and daily results arise from biases in the monthly volatility estimates attributable to daily return autocorrelation.
Publication Name: Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis
Subject: Business
ISSN: 0022-1090
Year: 2001
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
- Abstracts: Competition and coalition among underwriters: the decision to join a syndicate
- Abstracts: Treasury workstations: build vs. buy. Sterling commercial paper market holds future promise
- Abstracts: Anemic plans drag on corporate profits. Derivatives providers. Best Deals in Project Finance
- Abstracts: The elusive case for low inflation. Don't let deflation puncture your spirits. US inflation's mixed signals
- Abstracts: Golden promise at Abbeycrest. Acquisitions are golden investment. Bulgari