The Determinants of Capital Structure: An Empirical Study of New Zealand-Listed Firms

This paper investigates capital structure determinants of New Zealand-listed firms. This study is an extension from previous studies conducted by Boyle and Eckhold (1997) and, Wellalage & Locke (2012). Boyle and Eckhold and, Wellalage and Locke examine capital structure choices in New Zealand, e...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Fauzi, Fitriya, Basyith, A., Idris, M.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Macrothink institure 2013
Online Access:http://www.macrothink.org/journal/
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/23091
_version_ 1848751053306068992
author Fauzi, Fitriya
Basyith, A.
Idris, M.
author_facet Fauzi, Fitriya
Basyith, A.
Idris, M.
author_sort Fauzi, Fitriya
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This paper investigates capital structure determinants of New Zealand-listed firms. This study is an extension from previous studies conducted by Boyle and Eckhold (1997) and, Wellalage & Locke (2012). Boyle and Eckhold and, Wellalage and Locke examine capital structure choices in New Zealand, especially the debt choices of NZ’s corporate firms. Using a balanced-panel of 79 New Zealand-listed firms, this study employs a balanced panel method, using dynamic-panel Instrumental Variable-Generalised Methods of Moments (IV-GMM) as it corrects heteroskedasticity and endogeneity problems which might result in an unbiased and inconsistent estimation. All variables, apart from non-debt tax shields and profitability exhibit a significant impact on total debt. Overall, these variables confirm the trade-off theory, even though the coefficient for non-debt tax shield confirms the pecking-order theory. The empirical evidence is less conclusive than that of previous studies in other countries, particularly Australia where capital structure confirms the pecking-order theory. Overall, the trade-off theory is more appropriate in explaining New Zealand listed firms’ capital structure. In addition, it appears that the capital structure theories applied to each study are contradictory, even though the result is in line with Boyle and Eckhold and, Wellalage and Locke which find that those firms’ specific characteristics play a significant role in determining the firm’s debt level. However, the contradictory results may be due to the different methods, time frames and scope of the samples used.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T07:46:36Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-23091
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T07:46:36Z
publishDate 2013
publisher Macrothink institure
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-230912017-09-13T13:58:22Z The Determinants of Capital Structure: An Empirical Study of New Zealand-Listed Firms Fauzi, Fitriya Basyith, A. Idris, M. This paper investigates capital structure determinants of New Zealand-listed firms. This study is an extension from previous studies conducted by Boyle and Eckhold (1997) and, Wellalage & Locke (2012). Boyle and Eckhold and, Wellalage and Locke examine capital structure choices in New Zealand, especially the debt choices of NZ’s corporate firms. Using a balanced-panel of 79 New Zealand-listed firms, this study employs a balanced panel method, using dynamic-panel Instrumental Variable-Generalised Methods of Moments (IV-GMM) as it corrects heteroskedasticity and endogeneity problems which might result in an unbiased and inconsistent estimation. All variables, apart from non-debt tax shields and profitability exhibit a significant impact on total debt. Overall, these variables confirm the trade-off theory, even though the coefficient for non-debt tax shield confirms the pecking-order theory. The empirical evidence is less conclusive than that of previous studies in other countries, particularly Australia where capital structure confirms the pecking-order theory. Overall, the trade-off theory is more appropriate in explaining New Zealand listed firms’ capital structure. In addition, it appears that the capital structure theories applied to each study are contradictory, even though the result is in line with Boyle and Eckhold and, Wellalage and Locke which find that those firms’ specific characteristics play a significant role in determining the firm’s debt level. However, the contradictory results may be due to the different methods, time frames and scope of the samples used. 2013 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/23091 10.5296/ajfa.v5i2.3740 http://www.macrothink.org/journal/ Macrothink institure restricted
spellingShingle Fauzi, Fitriya
Basyith, A.
Idris, M.
The Determinants of Capital Structure: An Empirical Study of New Zealand-Listed Firms
title The Determinants of Capital Structure: An Empirical Study of New Zealand-Listed Firms
title_full The Determinants of Capital Structure: An Empirical Study of New Zealand-Listed Firms
title_fullStr The Determinants of Capital Structure: An Empirical Study of New Zealand-Listed Firms
title_full_unstemmed The Determinants of Capital Structure: An Empirical Study of New Zealand-Listed Firms
title_short The Determinants of Capital Structure: An Empirical Study of New Zealand-Listed Firms
title_sort determinants of capital structure: an empirical study of new zealand-listed firms
url http://www.macrothink.org/journal/
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/23091