Incentives of derivative hedging: Evidence from German non-financial corporations

This thesis empirically investigates the determinants of derivative hedging by German non-financial corporations. The sample consists of 397 corporations observed over a period of five-years, where a keyword approach is utilised to collect data on hedging activity from annual reports. Univariate and...

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Main Author: Pfleiderer, Felix
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36480/
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author Pfleiderer, Felix
author_facet Pfleiderer, Felix
author_sort Pfleiderer, Felix
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis empirically investigates the determinants of derivative hedging by German non-financial corporations. The sample consists of 397 corporations observed over a period of five-years, where a keyword approach is utilised to collect data on hedging activity from annual reports. Univariate and multivariate logit regressions show that derivative hedging is prominent in larger corporations and corporations facing foreign exposure. The analysis in this study further recognises the existence of a potential bias created by inclusion of natural-hedger and speculators in the sample. The findings of multivariate regressions excluding those groups show if any an only marginally weakening effect on the hypothesis that corporations hedge due to expected costs of financial distress, price exposure and liquidity. The hypothesis of underinvestment costs as a motivating factor to hedge with derivatives is only supported limited in the sample concerned. Beyond this, univariate tests on post-hedging measures of the only interest rate exposed sample suggest that derivatives are used significantly to enhance returns thus increasing a corporations’ value and furthermore implying speculation.
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spelling nottingham-364802017-10-19T16:59:18Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36480/ Incentives of derivative hedging: Evidence from German non-financial corporations Pfleiderer, Felix This thesis empirically investigates the determinants of derivative hedging by German non-financial corporations. The sample consists of 397 corporations observed over a period of five-years, where a keyword approach is utilised to collect data on hedging activity from annual reports. Univariate and multivariate logit regressions show that derivative hedging is prominent in larger corporations and corporations facing foreign exposure. The analysis in this study further recognises the existence of a potential bias created by inclusion of natural-hedger and speculators in the sample. The findings of multivariate regressions excluding those groups show if any an only marginally weakening effect on the hypothesis that corporations hedge due to expected costs of financial distress, price exposure and liquidity. The hypothesis of underinvestment costs as a motivating factor to hedge with derivatives is only supported limited in the sample concerned. Beyond this, univariate tests on post-hedging measures of the only interest rate exposed sample suggest that derivatives are used significantly to enhance returns thus increasing a corporations’ value and furthermore implying speculation. 2016-09-12 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36480/1/MSc%20Finance%20Investment%20Thesis%20Felix%20Pfleiderer%202016%20electronic.pdf Pfleiderer, Felix (2016) Incentives of derivative hedging: Evidence from German non-financial corporations. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] derivative hedging risk management natural hedge speculation germany non-financial corporations
spellingShingle derivative hedging
risk management
natural hedge
speculation
germany
non-financial corporations
Pfleiderer, Felix
Incentives of derivative hedging: Evidence from German non-financial corporations
title Incentives of derivative hedging: Evidence from German non-financial corporations
title_full Incentives of derivative hedging: Evidence from German non-financial corporations
title_fullStr Incentives of derivative hedging: Evidence from German non-financial corporations
title_full_unstemmed Incentives of derivative hedging: Evidence from German non-financial corporations
title_short Incentives of derivative hedging: Evidence from German non-financial corporations
title_sort incentives of derivative hedging: evidence from german non-financial corporations
topic derivative hedging
risk management
natural hedge
speculation
germany
non-financial corporations
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/36480/