TY - JOUR
T1 - Does foreign competition affect corporate debt maturity structure? Evidence from import penetration
AU - Atawnah, Nader
AU - Zaman, Rashid
AU - Liu, Jia
AU - Atawna, Thaer
AU - Maghyereh, Aktham
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2023/3
Y1 - 2023/3
N2 - This paper examines an unexplored issue of how a firm's competitive environment, proxied by import penetration, affects its debt maturity structure. We document a significant, positive relationship between foreign product competition and the proportion of short-term debt. Our results are robust to a series of sensitivity tests and endogeneity concerns. Utilising large, unexpected reductions in import tariffs as exogenous shocks to foreign competition, we validate the positive effect of import penetration on short-term debt. Our results hold more strongly for firms with high information asymmetry and weak external monitoring. These findings indicate that lenders offer short-term debt to prospective borrowers when they exhibit higher information asymmetry in response to increased foreign competition. Additional tests reveal that short-term debt in a firm's financial structure, contingent upon foreign competition, encourages managers to engage in tax avoidance as an alternative funding source. Our study provides novel evidence of the consequential impact of foreign product competition in debt contracting, giving us insights into its practical implications for corporate strategies and the ramifications of trade liberalisation for policymakers.
AB - This paper examines an unexplored issue of how a firm's competitive environment, proxied by import penetration, affects its debt maturity structure. We document a significant, positive relationship between foreign product competition and the proportion of short-term debt. Our results are robust to a series of sensitivity tests and endogeneity concerns. Utilising large, unexpected reductions in import tariffs as exogenous shocks to foreign competition, we validate the positive effect of import penetration on short-term debt. Our results hold more strongly for firms with high information asymmetry and weak external monitoring. These findings indicate that lenders offer short-term debt to prospective borrowers when they exhibit higher information asymmetry in response to increased foreign competition. Additional tests reveal that short-term debt in a firm's financial structure, contingent upon foreign competition, encourages managers to engage in tax avoidance as an alternative funding source. Our study provides novel evidence of the consequential impact of foreign product competition in debt contracting, giving us insights into its practical implications for corporate strategies and the ramifications of trade liberalisation for policymakers.
KW - Analysts following
KW - Corporate debt maturity
KW - Foreign product competition
KW - Information asymmetry
KW - Institutional investors
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U2 - 10.1016/j.irfa.2023.102539
DO - 10.1016/j.irfa.2023.102539
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85147107686
SN - 1057-5219
VL - 86
JO - International Review of Financial Analysis
JF - International Review of Financial Analysis
M1 - 102539
ER -