Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Corporate liquidity, investment and financial c...
View graph of relations

Corporate liquidity, investment and financial constraints: implications from a multi-period model

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Corporate liquidity, investment and financial constraints: implications from a multi-period model. / Dasgupta, Sudipto; Sengupta, Kunal.
In: Journal of Financial Intermediation, Vol. 16, No. 2, 04.2007, p. 151-174.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Dasgupta S, Sengupta K. Corporate liquidity, investment and financial constraints: implications from a multi-period model. Journal of Financial Intermediation. 2007 Apr;16(2):151-174. doi: 10.1016/j.jfi.2006.09.002

Author

Dasgupta, Sudipto ; Sengupta, Kunal. / Corporate liquidity, investment and financial constraints : implications from a multi-period model. In: Journal of Financial Intermediation. 2007 ; Vol. 16, No. 2. pp. 151-174.

Bibtex

@article{c05aca786c404c4992c0c9372bd69ddc,
title = "Corporate liquidity, investment and financial constraints: implications from a multi-period model",
abstract = "In single period models, financially constrained firms invest more in response to increases in their net worth or interest rate cuts. We examine whether or not these results necessarily hold in a multi-period setting. We present a multi-period version of the Holmstrom and Tirole moral hazard model and show that the probability of investment (or the hurdle rate for investment) in the first period of a two-period model is non-monotonic in the level of liquid balances [Holmstrom, B., Tirole, J., 1997. Financial intermediation, loanable funds, and the real sector. Quart. J. Econ. 112 (3), 663–691. August; Holmstrom, B., Tirole, J., 1998. Private and public supply of liquidity. J. Polit. Economy 106 (1), 1–40. February; Holmstrom, B., Tirole, J., 2000. Liquidity and risk management. J. Money, Credit, Banking 32 (3), 295–319. August]. When a risk-free interest rate is introduced in the model, we show that a lower interest rate (or a downward shift or the yield curve) can lead to less current investment due to the interaction of future financial constraints and discounting of cash flows. Our results have implications for the effect of monetary policy on investment by financially constrained firms. They also address several recent empirical debates, such as the relationship between liquidity and the cash-flow sensitivity of investment, and whether or not accumulation of cash balances by Japanese firms can be consistent with the existence of financial constraints affecting investment.",
keywords = "Financial constraints, Balance sheet channel, Monetary policy, Hurdle rates",
author = "Sudipto Dasgupta and Kunal Sengupta",
year = "2007",
month = apr,
doi = "10.1016/j.jfi.2006.09.002",
language = "English",
volume = "16",
pages = "151--174",
journal = "Journal of Financial Intermediation",
issn = "1042-9573",
publisher = "Academic Press Inc.",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Corporate liquidity, investment and financial constraints

T2 - implications from a multi-period model

AU - Dasgupta, Sudipto

AU - Sengupta, Kunal

PY - 2007/4

Y1 - 2007/4

N2 - In single period models, financially constrained firms invest more in response to increases in their net worth or interest rate cuts. We examine whether or not these results necessarily hold in a multi-period setting. We present a multi-period version of the Holmstrom and Tirole moral hazard model and show that the probability of investment (or the hurdle rate for investment) in the first period of a two-period model is non-monotonic in the level of liquid balances [Holmstrom, B., Tirole, J., 1997. Financial intermediation, loanable funds, and the real sector. Quart. J. Econ. 112 (3), 663–691. August; Holmstrom, B., Tirole, J., 1998. Private and public supply of liquidity. J. Polit. Economy 106 (1), 1–40. February; Holmstrom, B., Tirole, J., 2000. Liquidity and risk management. J. Money, Credit, Banking 32 (3), 295–319. August]. When a risk-free interest rate is introduced in the model, we show that a lower interest rate (or a downward shift or the yield curve) can lead to less current investment due to the interaction of future financial constraints and discounting of cash flows. Our results have implications for the effect of monetary policy on investment by financially constrained firms. They also address several recent empirical debates, such as the relationship between liquidity and the cash-flow sensitivity of investment, and whether or not accumulation of cash balances by Japanese firms can be consistent with the existence of financial constraints affecting investment.

AB - In single period models, financially constrained firms invest more in response to increases in their net worth or interest rate cuts. We examine whether or not these results necessarily hold in a multi-period setting. We present a multi-period version of the Holmstrom and Tirole moral hazard model and show that the probability of investment (or the hurdle rate for investment) in the first period of a two-period model is non-monotonic in the level of liquid balances [Holmstrom, B., Tirole, J., 1997. Financial intermediation, loanable funds, and the real sector. Quart. J. Econ. 112 (3), 663–691. August; Holmstrom, B., Tirole, J., 1998. Private and public supply of liquidity. J. Polit. Economy 106 (1), 1–40. February; Holmstrom, B., Tirole, J., 2000. Liquidity and risk management. J. Money, Credit, Banking 32 (3), 295–319. August]. When a risk-free interest rate is introduced in the model, we show that a lower interest rate (or a downward shift or the yield curve) can lead to less current investment due to the interaction of future financial constraints and discounting of cash flows. Our results have implications for the effect of monetary policy on investment by financially constrained firms. They also address several recent empirical debates, such as the relationship between liquidity and the cash-flow sensitivity of investment, and whether or not accumulation of cash balances by Japanese firms can be consistent with the existence of financial constraints affecting investment.

KW - Financial constraints

KW - Balance sheet channel

KW - Monetary policy

KW - Hurdle rates

U2 - 10.1016/j.jfi.2006.09.002

DO - 10.1016/j.jfi.2006.09.002

M3 - Journal article

VL - 16

SP - 151

EP - 174

JO - Journal of Financial Intermediation

JF - Journal of Financial Intermediation

SN - 1042-9573

IS - 2

ER -