The impact of cash holding on stock returns during a crisis: evidence from Chinese firms in COVID-19

This paper uses an event study approach and data from the SSE A-share Main Board and SZSE A-share to explore whether cash holdings could mitigate the negative influence of COVID-19 on share prices. In this paper, the outbreak was found to have a negative effect on the share price. Within the event w...

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Main Author: CHEN, LEYAN
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/70069/
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author CHEN, LEYAN
author_facet CHEN, LEYAN
author_sort CHEN, LEYAN
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This paper uses an event study approach and data from the SSE A-share Main Board and SZSE A-share to explore whether cash holdings could mitigate the negative influence of COVID-19 on share prices. In this paper, the outbreak was found to have a negative effect on the share price. Within the event window, large companies with more cash and less debt were less affected by the epidemic. Moreover, the positive impact of cash holding on stock prices was found to be more significant in companies with low cash holdings, while excessive cash holdings could not contribute to stock prices. Further analysis of which factors would affect the relationship. Firstly, agency issues still negatively affect the relationship between the two. Second, the positive influence of cash holding on share price is more noticeable among firms with higher information transparency. Third, in a regression grouped by equity, the positive impact of cash holding on share prices is more significant among non-state-owned firms. Based on three theories of cash holdings, this paper examines whether cash holdings could inhibit a firm's share price decline under an epidemic. The trade-off theory has been confirmed. And it is suggested that cash has a precautionary value and the relationship between cash holding and the firm’s value would be an inverted U-shaped relationship.
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spelling nottingham-700692023-06-21T14:36:28Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/70069/ The impact of cash holding on stock returns during a crisis: evidence from Chinese firms in COVID-19 CHEN, LEYAN This paper uses an event study approach and data from the SSE A-share Main Board and SZSE A-share to explore whether cash holdings could mitigate the negative influence of COVID-19 on share prices. In this paper, the outbreak was found to have a negative effect on the share price. Within the event window, large companies with more cash and less debt were less affected by the epidemic. Moreover, the positive impact of cash holding on stock prices was found to be more significant in companies with low cash holdings, while excessive cash holdings could not contribute to stock prices. Further analysis of which factors would affect the relationship. Firstly, agency issues still negatively affect the relationship between the two. Second, the positive influence of cash holding on share price is more noticeable among firms with higher information transparency. Third, in a regression grouped by equity, the positive impact of cash holding on share prices is more significant among non-state-owned firms. Based on three theories of cash holdings, this paper examines whether cash holdings could inhibit a firm's share price decline under an epidemic. The trade-off theory has been confirmed. And it is suggested that cash has a precautionary value and the relationship between cash holding and the firm’s value would be an inverted U-shaped relationship. 2022 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/70069/1/The%20impact%20of%20cash%20holding%20on%20stock%20returns%20during%20a%20crisis%20evidence%20from%20Chinese%20firms%20in%20COVID-19.pdf CHEN, LEYAN (2022) The impact of cash holding on stock returns during a crisis: evidence from Chinese firms in COVID-19. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] COVID-19 cash holding market reaction trade-off theory firm’s value
spellingShingle COVID-19
cash holding
market reaction
trade-off theory
firm’s value
CHEN, LEYAN
The impact of cash holding on stock returns during a crisis: evidence from Chinese firms in COVID-19
title The impact of cash holding on stock returns during a crisis: evidence from Chinese firms in COVID-19
title_full The impact of cash holding on stock returns during a crisis: evidence from Chinese firms in COVID-19
title_fullStr The impact of cash holding on stock returns during a crisis: evidence from Chinese firms in COVID-19
title_full_unstemmed The impact of cash holding on stock returns during a crisis: evidence from Chinese firms in COVID-19
title_short The impact of cash holding on stock returns during a crisis: evidence from Chinese firms in COVID-19
title_sort impact of cash holding on stock returns during a crisis: evidence from chinese firms in covid-19
topic COVID-19
cash holding
market reaction
trade-off theory
firm’s value
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/70069/