Functional fixation: an investigation of the influence of earnings per share on company financing decisions

In this thesis the various arguments that have been put forward for the determinants of a company's capital structure are examined critically. However, none of these succeeds convincingly in reflecting actual practice. Furthermore, it is argued that the common practice of concentrating on Earn...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mallin, Chris A.
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 1993
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11385/
_version_ 1848791264892289024
author Mallin, Chris A.
author_facet Mallin, Chris A.
author_sort Mallin, Chris A.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description In this thesis the various arguments that have been put forward for the determinants of a company's capital structure are examined critically. However, none of these succeeds convincingly in reflecting actual practice. Furthermore, it is argued that the common practice of concentrating on Earnings Per Share (EPS) as a key indicator of a company's performance also impacts on the capital issue choice, and that there is functional fixation on EPS, particularly short-term EPS. Therefore the effect on a company's EPS of a particular method of finance turns out to be an important influence on a company's financing decisions. A questionnaire sent to finance directors of companies elicits their views on their perceptions of the important influences on the choice of financing, and the responses are analysed using multivariate techniques. The results are encouraging as far as the present research question is concerned. An innovative approach of reconstructing company's financial statements to investigate the impact on various financial data if an alternative financing method had been chosen provides further evidence of a fixation on EPS. Limited dependent variable analysis is carried out to determine the variables which appear to influence the debtequity choice. A by-product of the research question is an analysis of 'elasticity' measures of gearing, i. e. degrees of financial and operating leverage; and the usefulness and consistency of the bases of measurement used for these. This thesis seeks to determine the extent to which financial choice is explained by, or at least consistent with, the maximisation of Earnings Per Share. In so doing, it seeks to provide a vital link between finance research and related financial accounting issues.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T18:25:45Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-11385
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T18:25:45Z
publishDate 1993
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-113852025-02-28T11:13:06Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11385/ Functional fixation: an investigation of the influence of earnings per share on company financing decisions Mallin, Chris A. In this thesis the various arguments that have been put forward for the determinants of a company's capital structure are examined critically. However, none of these succeeds convincingly in reflecting actual practice. Furthermore, it is argued that the common practice of concentrating on Earnings Per Share (EPS) as a key indicator of a company's performance also impacts on the capital issue choice, and that there is functional fixation on EPS, particularly short-term EPS. Therefore the effect on a company's EPS of a particular method of finance turns out to be an important influence on a company's financing decisions. A questionnaire sent to finance directors of companies elicits their views on their perceptions of the important influences on the choice of financing, and the responses are analysed using multivariate techniques. The results are encouraging as far as the present research question is concerned. An innovative approach of reconstructing company's financial statements to investigate the impact on various financial data if an alternative financing method had been chosen provides further evidence of a fixation on EPS. Limited dependent variable analysis is carried out to determine the variables which appear to influence the debtequity choice. A by-product of the research question is an analysis of 'elasticity' measures of gearing, i. e. degrees of financial and operating leverage; and the usefulness and consistency of the bases of measurement used for these. This thesis seeks to determine the extent to which financial choice is explained by, or at least consistent with, the maximisation of Earnings Per Share. In so doing, it seeks to provide a vital link between finance research and related financial accounting issues. 1993 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11385/1/334856.pdf Mallin, Chris A. (1993) Functional fixation: an investigation of the influence of earnings per share on company financing decisions. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. earnings per share eps company finance corporate finance
spellingShingle earnings per share
eps
company finance
corporate finance
Mallin, Chris A.
Functional fixation: an investigation of the influence of earnings per share on company financing decisions
title Functional fixation: an investigation of the influence of earnings per share on company financing decisions
title_full Functional fixation: an investigation of the influence of earnings per share on company financing decisions
title_fullStr Functional fixation: an investigation of the influence of earnings per share on company financing decisions
title_full_unstemmed Functional fixation: an investigation of the influence of earnings per share on company financing decisions
title_short Functional fixation: an investigation of the influence of earnings per share on company financing decisions
title_sort functional fixation: an investigation of the influence of earnings per share on company financing decisions
topic earnings per share
eps
company finance
corporate finance
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/11385/