Determinants of Capital Structure of UK Quoted Companies

This paper investigates the determinants of capital structure in UK, seeks to determine, which capital structure theory is more applicable to UK companies, and intends to compare UK findings with previous empirical literature. Five determinants of capital structure, namely firm size, asset tangibili...

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Main Author: Paulauskas, Justas
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/21993/
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author Paulauskas, Justas
author_facet Paulauskas, Justas
author_sort Paulauskas, Justas
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This paper investigates the determinants of capital structure in UK, seeks to determine, which capital structure theory is more applicable to UK companies, and intends to compare UK findings with previous empirical literature. Five determinants of capital structure, namely firm size, asset tangibility, profitability, growth opportunities and non-debt tax shields, are used in the research. Panel data set of 446 UK public quoted companies during 1998-2007 period is employed. Research methodology encompasses the use of several multiple regression models, namely regression with industry dummies to measure the importance of industry effects in explaining debt ratios, pooled panel OLS regression, and fixed/random effects panel data regression that accounts for firm-specific time-invariant heterogeneity in the data. Additionally, time dummies are added in each regression to include for sample-wide macroeconomic shocks. Each model is tested using both book debt and market debt ratios. The leverage is found to be determined by firm size (+), asset tangibility (+), profitability (-) and growth opportunities (-). A very weak negative effect of non-debt tax shields is also found. Up to 36% of variance in leverage is found to be explained by industry effects. Pooled OLS model can explain up to 49% of variance in leverage. Fixed/random effects model describes up to 27% of variance in leverage. The results are found to be generally robust not only to the method of estimation, which confirms that the same determinants affect debt ratios both within and between firms, but also to alternative definitions of leverage and alternative proxies for the determinants of capital structure. No conclusive evidence is found that one single theory can explain the differences in capital structure in UK better than another. Both pooled OLS and fixed/random effects models provide similarly mixed and inconclusive results. Nevertheless, the findings on UK companies compare favourably to most of the previous empirical tests. The negative link between leverage and profitability remains the main puzzle for the supporters of the trade-off theory. Moreover, limitations of the research are recognised and recommendations for future research are made.
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spelling nottingham-219932018-02-15T07:44:23Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/21993/ Determinants of Capital Structure of UK Quoted Companies Paulauskas, Justas This paper investigates the determinants of capital structure in UK, seeks to determine, which capital structure theory is more applicable to UK companies, and intends to compare UK findings with previous empirical literature. Five determinants of capital structure, namely firm size, asset tangibility, profitability, growth opportunities and non-debt tax shields, are used in the research. Panel data set of 446 UK public quoted companies during 1998-2007 period is employed. Research methodology encompasses the use of several multiple regression models, namely regression with industry dummies to measure the importance of industry effects in explaining debt ratios, pooled panel OLS regression, and fixed/random effects panel data regression that accounts for firm-specific time-invariant heterogeneity in the data. Additionally, time dummies are added in each regression to include for sample-wide macroeconomic shocks. Each model is tested using both book debt and market debt ratios. The leverage is found to be determined by firm size (+), asset tangibility (+), profitability (-) and growth opportunities (-). A very weak negative effect of non-debt tax shields is also found. Up to 36% of variance in leverage is found to be explained by industry effects. Pooled OLS model can explain up to 49% of variance in leverage. Fixed/random effects model describes up to 27% of variance in leverage. The results are found to be generally robust not only to the method of estimation, which confirms that the same determinants affect debt ratios both within and between firms, but also to alternative definitions of leverage and alternative proxies for the determinants of capital structure. No conclusive evidence is found that one single theory can explain the differences in capital structure in UK better than another. Both pooled OLS and fixed/random effects models provide similarly mixed and inconclusive results. Nevertheless, the findings on UK companies compare favourably to most of the previous empirical tests. The negative link between leverage and profitability remains the main puzzle for the supporters of the trade-off theory. Moreover, limitations of the research are recognised and recommendations for future research are made. 2008 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/21993/1/08MAlixjp5.pdf Paulauskas, Justas (2008) Determinants of Capital Structure of UK Quoted Companies. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] (Unpublished) capital structure determinants of capital structure capital structure theory uk capital structure trade-off theory pecking order theory debt equity choice debt ratio industry effects firm specific heterogeneity pooled OLS pooled regression fixed effects model random effects model
spellingShingle capital structure
determinants of capital structure
capital structure theory
uk capital structure
trade-off theory
pecking order theory
debt equity choice
debt ratio
industry effects
firm specific heterogeneity
pooled OLS
pooled regression
fixed effects model
random effects model
Paulauskas, Justas
Determinants of Capital Structure of UK Quoted Companies
title Determinants of Capital Structure of UK Quoted Companies
title_full Determinants of Capital Structure of UK Quoted Companies
title_fullStr Determinants of Capital Structure of UK Quoted Companies
title_full_unstemmed Determinants of Capital Structure of UK Quoted Companies
title_short Determinants of Capital Structure of UK Quoted Companies
title_sort determinants of capital structure of uk quoted companies
topic capital structure
determinants of capital structure
capital structure theory
uk capital structure
trade-off theory
pecking order theory
debt equity choice
debt ratio
industry effects
firm specific heterogeneity
pooled OLS
pooled regression
fixed effects model
random effects model
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/21993/