Evaluating the impact of global financial conditions on leverage: evidence from Japanese firms

Our study examines the impact of shifts in global financial conditions on leverage of Japanese firms listed on the first and second section of the Tokyo Stock Exchange. It employs a panel data set of 100 firms for the period 2011-2019. We develop three models to investigate our research objectives....

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Main Author: Rasheed, Zimna
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2021
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/63212/
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author Rasheed, Zimna
author_facet Rasheed, Zimna
author_sort Rasheed, Zimna
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Our study examines the impact of shifts in global financial conditions on leverage of Japanese firms listed on the first and second section of the Tokyo Stock Exchange. It employs a panel data set of 100 firms for the period 2011-2019. We develop three models to investigate our research objectives. The panel data analysis for Model 1 shows global financial conditions having an inverse relation with leverage while Model 2 reveals no evidence of smaller firms affecting differently to the changes in global financial conditions in comparison to large firms. Our third Model investigating the transmission channels measured by the level of monetary policy synchronisation between the countries is insignificant. This implies that the changes in global financial conditions is not transmitted to the economy through domestic interest rates. Our analysis suggests that the negative association of global financial conditions with leverage may not be driven by the changes in federal funds rates per se, but rather due to the country specific factors considering the market instabilities observed in the Japanese economy during our sample period. We find that Japanese listed firms are fairly large in contrast to the listed firms in other economies and most firms relies on retained earnings including cash holdings to reduce cost of debt. We believe that global financial conditions may not be a strong factor that influences the leverage of firms in advanced economies. Our study provides an insight to the policymakers and regulatory institutions in being more cautious when making macroeconomic decisions as not only it affects the financial institutions but also businesses reliant on bank borrowings. It also encourages to formulate active macro-prudential policies with greater supervisory standards to achieve financial stability. Further, it is of great significance to academicians and practitioners as research solely based on the Japanese market is rather limited and our contribution helps to fill that gap in the previous literatures.
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format Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
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publishDate 2021
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spelling nottingham-632122021-04-16T03:40:33Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/63212/ Evaluating the impact of global financial conditions on leverage: evidence from Japanese firms Rasheed, Zimna Our study examines the impact of shifts in global financial conditions on leverage of Japanese firms listed on the first and second section of the Tokyo Stock Exchange. It employs a panel data set of 100 firms for the period 2011-2019. We develop three models to investigate our research objectives. The panel data analysis for Model 1 shows global financial conditions having an inverse relation with leverage while Model 2 reveals no evidence of smaller firms affecting differently to the changes in global financial conditions in comparison to large firms. Our third Model investigating the transmission channels measured by the level of monetary policy synchronisation between the countries is insignificant. This implies that the changes in global financial conditions is not transmitted to the economy through domestic interest rates. Our analysis suggests that the negative association of global financial conditions with leverage may not be driven by the changes in federal funds rates per se, but rather due to the country specific factors considering the market instabilities observed in the Japanese economy during our sample period. We find that Japanese listed firms are fairly large in contrast to the listed firms in other economies and most firms relies on retained earnings including cash holdings to reduce cost of debt. We believe that global financial conditions may not be a strong factor that influences the leverage of firms in advanced economies. Our study provides an insight to the policymakers and regulatory institutions in being more cautious when making macroeconomic decisions as not only it affects the financial institutions but also businesses reliant on bank borrowings. It also encourages to formulate active macro-prudential policies with greater supervisory standards to achieve financial stability. Further, it is of great significance to academicians and practitioners as research solely based on the Japanese market is rather limited and our contribution helps to fill that gap in the previous literatures. 2021-02-24 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/63212/1/F%26%20I%20Dissertation.pdf Rasheed, Zimna (2021) Evaluating the impact of global financial conditions on leverage: evidence from Japanese firms. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)]
spellingShingle Rasheed, Zimna
Evaluating the impact of global financial conditions on leverage: evidence from Japanese firms
title Evaluating the impact of global financial conditions on leverage: evidence from Japanese firms
title_full Evaluating the impact of global financial conditions on leverage: evidence from Japanese firms
title_fullStr Evaluating the impact of global financial conditions on leverage: evidence from Japanese firms
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating the impact of global financial conditions on leverage: evidence from Japanese firms
title_short Evaluating the impact of global financial conditions on leverage: evidence from Japanese firms
title_sort evaluating the impact of global financial conditions on leverage: evidence from japanese firms
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/63212/