Hausarbeiten logo
Shop
Shop
Tutorials
De En
Shop
Tutorials
  • How to find your topic
  • How to research effectively
  • How to structure an academic paper
  • How to cite correctly
  • How to format in Word
Trends
FAQ
Zur Shop-Startseite › BWL - Investition und Finanzierung

Influential Literature Analysis on the Pecking Order Theory: An Investigation

Titel: Influential Literature Analysis on the Pecking Order Theory: An Investigation

Essay , 2010 , 17 Seiten , Note: 15

Autor:in: B.Sc. Marsilius Graf von Ingelheim (Autor:in)

BWL - Investition und Finanzierung

Leseprobe & Details   Blick ins Buch
Zusammenfassung Leseprobe Details

• The Investigation of the Influential Literature Analysis on The Pecking Order Theory researches the categorisation provided in the first assignment of this course. The focus is on explaining how authors of influential articles contributed to the evolution of this research approach.
• Based on the categorisation the papers are evaluated by highlighting their core research approach and result. In a next step this paper tries to link the approaches to present and overall picture of the underlying research area. The author introduces several hypotheses that are tested with help of empirical findings in different papers.
• The Pecking Order Theory is a theoretical concept used in finance research and business related articles. This paper shows that the theory cannot be rejected but is not fully supported. The finance decision of a company are complex and linked with its own history a single concept has not the explanatory power to give a reliable answer.
• Academic articles mainly focus on theoretical concepts. These concepts are not able to reflect the real business world. By trying to get an insight into business, the authors limit themselves by choosing data sets for special areas, companies and period of times only.
• Future research approach need to link the dynamic financial decisions of a company with a more flexible approach towards explaining the capital structure of a firm. Dynamic models are the key to get a reliable insight into managerial behaviour.
• This paper gives a good understanding of how The Pecking Order Theory evolved over time and why academics are still discussing this topic on a broad basis. By linking it to business related articles and hypotheses that are tested, the results delivered here are not biased in one direction.

Leseprobe


Table of Contents

1. Executive Summary

2. Introduction

3. Simple Example of Using the Pecking Order Theory

4. Results from the Influential Literature Analysis

5. The Pecking Order Theory in Corporate Finance Research

6. The Use of the Pecking Order Theory in Business Decisions

7. Testing the Pecking Order Theory

8. Hypothesis and Empirical Results

9. Concluding Remarks

10. References

Research Objectives and Core Themes

This paper examines the evolution and validity of the Pecking Order Theory within corporate finance. By analyzing influential academic literature and introducing specific financial hypotheses, the study aims to determine whether the theory effectively explains firm financing behavior or if it remains constrained by limited empirical applicability.

  • Evolution of the Pecking Order Theory in academic discourse.
  • Categorization of influential research approaches and results.
  • Evaluation of managerial financing decisions and capital structure.
  • Empirical testing of hypotheses regarding profit, cash flow, and firm maturity.

Excerpt from the Publication

3. Simple Example of Using the Pecking Order Theory

This chapter will give a simple example of how managers and investors interact in favour of the Pecking Order Theory. The example gives a basic numerical understanding of the approach. The author will use this example in order to value research hypothesis in a later chapter and for giving the readers a more practical point of view.

A company has the opportunity to undertake an investment project in t0 with a net present value of I. Investors on the capital market are risk neutral and the investment project can only be undertaken as a whole. Managers act in the favour of existing shareholders. The amount of cash C of the company is smaller than the net present value I. In order to finance this project the company needs to raise new equity. The volume of new shares is therefore E=I-C.

There are tow possible states of the world (S1 and S2 ) with the same possibility of 50%.

Summary of Chapters

1. Executive Summary: Provides an overview of the investigation into the Pecking Order Theory and outlines the core findings regarding its theoretical and empirical limitations.

2. Introduction: Discusses the challenge of corporate financing decisions and introduces the Pecking Order Theory as a foundational concept in finance research.

3. Simple Example of Using the Pecking Order Theory: Illustrates the interaction between managers and investors during equity issuance through a numerical model.

4. Results from the Influential Literature Analysis: Outlines the parameters and categorization used to select the 25 most influential articles on the topic.

5. The Pecking Order Theory in Corporate Finance Research: Compares academic approaches and models that examine capital structure theories and agency costs.

6. The Use of the Pecking Order Theory in Business Decisions: Analyzes survey data from CFOs to determine how financial flexibility and capital budgeting are handled in practice.

7. Testing the Pecking Order Theory: Reviews specialized papers that utilize regression models and statistical observations to test the theory.

8. Hypothesis and Empirical Results: Connects the theory to testable hypotheses regarding company profitability, cash flow, and firm age.

9. Concluding Remarks: Summarizes the study’s findings, noting that while the theory is a fundamental concept, it is heavily influenced by sample selection bias.

10. References: Lists the academic sources and empirical studies utilized throughout the investigation.

Keywords

Pecking Order Theory, Corporate Finance, Capital Structure, Asymmetric Information, Underinvestment, Financing Decisions, Equity Issuance, Debt Levels, Financial Flexibility, Market Timing, Empirical Research, Signaling Effect, NPV, Cash Flow, Firm Maturity.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the fundamental focus of this research paper?

The paper investigates the validity and evolution of the Pecking Order Theory by analyzing the categorization of influential finance literature and testing it against empirical findings.

What are the core thematic areas discussed in the work?

The core themes include capital structure theories, the impact of asymmetric information on financing, managerial decision-making, and the empirical testing of financial hypotheses.

What is the primary objective of this investigation?

The primary goal is to determine if the Pecking Order Theory holds validity as an explanation for firm behavior or if its practical application is limited by specific industry and sector constraints.

Which scientific methods are employed in this analysis?

The paper uses an Influential Literature Analysis (ILA) to categorize research, numerical modeling to demonstrate financing logic, and a hypothesis-driven review of empirical statistical data.

What is covered in the main body of the paper?

The main body covers a critical literature review, a demonstration of equity financing effects through a numerical example, and an evaluation of hypotheses relating profitability, cash flow, and firm age to debt levels.

What defines the Pecking Order Theory?

It is a theoretical framework suggesting that firms prefer internal financing (retained earnings) and use debt as a secondary option to avoid the information costs associated with issuing new equity.

How does the author evaluate the "Signaling Effect" in this context?

The author discusses how issuing equity can act as a negative signal to the market, which can be mitigated or altered depending on the firm's specific financial situation and management decisions.

Why do empirical results often fail to fully support the theory?

The author notes that empirical evaluations are often restricted to specific sectors, countries, or time periods, which prevents a generalized, universal confirmation of the theory across all business settings.

Does the author suggest that firms have a target capital structure?

The paper highlights that while many academic models suggest a target ratio, business practice often demonstrates that firms are more concerned with financial flexibility than adhering strictly to a static target.

Ende der Leseprobe aus 17 Seiten  - nach oben

Details

Titel
Influential Literature Analysis on the Pecking Order Theory: An Investigation
Hochschule
University of St Andrews  (School of Management)
Note
15
Autor
B.Sc. Marsilius Graf von Ingelheim (Autor:in)
Erscheinungsjahr
2010
Seiten
17
Katalognummer
V148555
ISBN (Buch)
9783640602414
ISBN (eBook)
9783640602575
Sprache
Englisch
Schlagworte
Pecking Order Theory Influential Literature Analysis Literature Analysis Literature Review Capital Structure Verschuldungsgrad
Produktsicherheit
GRIN Publishing GmbH
Arbeit zitieren
B.Sc. Marsilius Graf von Ingelheim (Autor:in), 2010, Influential Literature Analysis on the Pecking Order Theory: An Investigation, München, GRIN Verlag, https://www.hausarbeiten.de/document/148555
Blick ins Buch
  • Wenn Sie diese Meldung sehen, konnt das Bild nicht geladen und dargestellt werden.
  • Wenn Sie diese Meldung sehen, konnt das Bild nicht geladen und dargestellt werden.
  • Wenn Sie diese Meldung sehen, konnt das Bild nicht geladen und dargestellt werden.
  • Wenn Sie diese Meldung sehen, konnt das Bild nicht geladen und dargestellt werden.
  • Wenn Sie diese Meldung sehen, konnt das Bild nicht geladen und dargestellt werden.
  • Wenn Sie diese Meldung sehen, konnt das Bild nicht geladen und dargestellt werden.
  • Wenn Sie diese Meldung sehen, konnt das Bild nicht geladen und dargestellt werden.
Leseprobe aus  17  Seiten
Hausarbeiten logo
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
  • Shop
  • Tutorials
  • FAQ
  • Zahlung & Versand
  • Über uns
  • Contact
  • Datenschutz
  • AGB
  • Impressum