Inventory Accumulation, Cash Flow, and Corporate Investment

abstract: I show that firms' ability to adjust variable capital in response to productivity shocks has important implications for the interpretation of the widely documented investment-cash flow sensitivities. The variable capital adjustment is sufficient for firms to capture small variations i...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Kim, Kirak (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.18145
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-18145
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-181452018-06-22T03:04:13Z Inventory Accumulation, Cash Flow, and Corporate Investment abstract: I show that firms' ability to adjust variable capital in response to productivity shocks has important implications for the interpretation of the widely documented investment-cash flow sensitivities. The variable capital adjustment is sufficient for firms to capture small variations in profitability, but when the revision in profitability is relatively large, limited substitutability between the factors of production may call for fixed capital investment. Hence, firms with lower substitutability are more likely to invest in both factors together and have larger sensitivities of fixed capital investment to cash flow. By building a frictionless capital markets model that allows firms to optimize over fixed capital and inventories as substitutable factors, I establish the significance of the substitutability channel in explaining cross-sectional differences in cash flow sensitivities. Moreover, incorporating variable capital into firms' investment decisions helps explain the sharp decrease in cash flow sensitivities over the past decades. Empirical evidence confirms the model's predictions. Dissertation/Thesis Kim, Kirak (Author) Bates, Thomas (Advisor) Babenko, Ilona (Advisor) Hertzel, Michael (Committee member) Tserlukevich, Yuri (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Finance Economics Cash Flow Sensitivity Dynamic Investment Decision Q-theory Real Flexibility eng 90 pages Ph.D. Business Administration 2013 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.18145 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2013
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Finance
Economics
Cash Flow Sensitivity
Dynamic Investment Decision
Q-theory
Real Flexibility
spellingShingle Finance
Economics
Cash Flow Sensitivity
Dynamic Investment Decision
Q-theory
Real Flexibility
Inventory Accumulation, Cash Flow, and Corporate Investment
description abstract: I show that firms' ability to adjust variable capital in response to productivity shocks has important implications for the interpretation of the widely documented investment-cash flow sensitivities. The variable capital adjustment is sufficient for firms to capture small variations in profitability, but when the revision in profitability is relatively large, limited substitutability between the factors of production may call for fixed capital investment. Hence, firms with lower substitutability are more likely to invest in both factors together and have larger sensitivities of fixed capital investment to cash flow. By building a frictionless capital markets model that allows firms to optimize over fixed capital and inventories as substitutable factors, I establish the significance of the substitutability channel in explaining cross-sectional differences in cash flow sensitivities. Moreover, incorporating variable capital into firms' investment decisions helps explain the sharp decrease in cash flow sensitivities over the past decades. Empirical evidence confirms the model's predictions. === Dissertation/Thesis === Ph.D. Business Administration 2013
author2 Kim, Kirak (Author)
author_facet Kim, Kirak (Author)
title Inventory Accumulation, Cash Flow, and Corporate Investment
title_short Inventory Accumulation, Cash Flow, and Corporate Investment
title_full Inventory Accumulation, Cash Flow, and Corporate Investment
title_fullStr Inventory Accumulation, Cash Flow, and Corporate Investment
title_full_unstemmed Inventory Accumulation, Cash Flow, and Corporate Investment
title_sort inventory accumulation, cash flow, and corporate investment
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.18145
_version_ 1718700156332802048