Journal Of Financial And Strategic Decisions

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 Volume 9, Number 2   (Summer 1996) 
The Role Of Insiders And Dividend Policy:
A Comparison Of Regulated And Unregulated Firms
M. Cary Collins
Atul K. Saxena
James W. Wansley
Evaluating Oil And Gas Assets:
Option Pricing Methods Prove No Panacea
Ross N. Dickens
John Lohrenz
Corporate Environmental Strategy:
Impact Upon Firm Value
Richard J. Curcio
Fran M. Wolf
The Use Of Financial Ratios As Measures Of Risk
In The Determination Of The Bid-Ask Spread
Huldah A. Ryan
The Locational Determinants Of U.S. Foreign
Direct Investment In The European Union
Francisca M. Beer
Suzanne N. Cory
Behavioral Aspects Of The Intra-Industry
Capital Structure Decision
Greg Filbeck
Raymond F. Gorman
Dianna C. Preece
The Effect Of Equity-For-Debt Swaps
On Security Returns: Some New Evidence
Rajiv Kalra
Kam C. Chan
Gary A. Raines
An Empirical Analysis Of Market And Industry Factors:
In Stock Returns Of U.S. Aerospace Industry
Sung C. Bae
Gregory J. Duvall


 

Journal of Financial and Strategic Decisions
Volume 9, Number 2   Summer 1996

THE ROLE OF INSIDERS AND DIVIDEND POLICY:
A COMPARISON OF REGULATED AND UNREGULATED FIRMS

M. Cary Collins
The University of Tennessee

Atul K. Saxena
Mercer University

James W. Wansley
The University of Tennessee

Abstract
This paper explicitly recognizes the potential differences in dividend policy between regulated and unregulated firms and focuses on agency-cost and monitoring explanations for the relevance of dividends. The purpose of this paper is to examine the role of insiders in determining dividend policy for unregulated firms, utilities, and financial-services firms. Since utilities, and to some extent, financial-services firms, have regulators who serve as the low-cost informants to market participants, insiders play a reduced role in determining dividend policy compared to unregulated firms. A regression model is developed that addresses whether the role of regulators and insiders are substitutes or complements for utilities and financial-services firms. The regression results reveal fundamental differences in the relationship between insider holdings and dividend policy for unregulated firms and utilities, but suggest that the regulatory environment enhances–rather than mitigates–the importance of the insiders" role for utilities. For financial-services firms, the results do not support the hypothesis that increased equity risk through fixed-rate deposit insurance enhances the role of insiders when determining dividend policy.

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Journal of Financial and Strategic Decisions
Volume 9, Number 2   Summer 1996

EVALUATING OIL AND GAS ASSETS:
OPTION PRICING METHODS PROVE NO PANACEA

Ross N. Dickens
Louisiana Tech University

John Lohrenz
Louisiana Tech University

Abstract
The authors examine the validity of using option pricing theory methods to value oil and gas assets by comparing the value of discounted cash flow and option pricing methods for an actual Gulf of Mexico oil well. Option pricing method assumptions yield questionable valuation results for real, as opposed to financial, options. In fact, as a general rule, the further upstream the oil and gas asset is, the more the option pricing method assumptions may be questioned. Therefore, careful consideration should be given to any strategic decisions based on option pricing valuations.

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Journal of Financial and Strategic Decisions
Volume 9, Number 2   Summer 1996

CORPORATE ENVIRONMENTAL STRATEGY:
IMPACT UPON FIRM VALUE

Richard J. Curcio
Kent State University

Fran M. Wolf
Youngstown State University

Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the relationship between corporate environmental strategy and firm value. The major finding of this study is that corporate performance with regard to environmental responsibility is related to overall firm value. Adopting an environmentally responsible strategy appears to significantly enhance corporate financial performance for all firms except those serving industrial customers. Firms supplying industrial customers seem to benefit financially from a strategy of environmental indifference or irresponsibility.

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Journal of Financial and Strategic Decisions
Volume 9, Number 2   Summer 1996

THE USE OF FINANCIAL RATIOS AS MEASURES OF RISK
IN THE DETERMINATION OF THE BID-ASK SPREAD

Huldah A. Ryan
City University of New York

Abstract
The effect of financial reports on stock market behavior is a central issue of research in accounting and finance. A number of studies investigate how financial information becomes impounded in security prices and affects investment decisions. Prior studies on the determinants of the bid-ask spread investigate the effect of market risk measures, and provide evidence that the bid-ask spread is a positive function of risk. Other studies report on an association between market risk measures and accounting risk measures. The present study extends this line of research by examining the effect of risk, proxied by accounting risk measures, on the bid-ask spread. The results of ordinary least squares (OLS) regressions provide evidence of a statistically significant association between certain accounting ratios and the bid-ask spread, and indicate that accounting risk measures account for more variability in the bid-ask spread than market risk measures. Most notably, the results indicate that a model which includes both accounting risk measures and market risk measures is a better fitted model that one which includes either accounting risk measures or market risk measures alone.

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Journal of Financial and Strategic Decisions
Volume 9, Number 2   Summer 1996

THE LOCATIONAL DETERMINANTS OF U.S. FOREIGN
DIRECT INVESTMENT IN THE EUROPEAN UNION

Francisca M. Beer
California State University

Suzanne N. Cory
St Mary's University

Abstract
This paper empirically assesses United States direct investment in the European Union. In that respect, market size, growth rate, labor costs, export flows and tariff barriers have already been shown to influence U.S. foreign direct investment in the European Union. The present paper enlarges the field of knowledge on the matter by: (i) exploring the impact of two locational determinants of foreign direct investments, namely infrastructure and taxes and, (ii) including the opportunity costs associated with foreign investment.

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Journal of Financial and Strategic Decisions
Volume 9, Number 2   Summer 1996

BEHAVIORAL ASPECTS OF THE
INTRA-INDUSTRY CAPITAL STRUCTURE DECISION

Greg Filbeck
University of Toledo

Raymond F. Gorman
Miami University

Dianna C. Preece
University of Louisville

Abstract
The past decade has witnessed numerous challenges to the axioms of the von Neumann-Morgenstern utility maximizing theory of individual behavior. Most of these challenges have come from the field of psychology and have been in the form of experiments on humans which demonstrate frequent violations of these axioms. This cross fertilization between economics and psychology has begun to attract the attention of the finance profession as well.

In this paper we examine two hypotheses, developed from this literature, which may help explain how firms within an industry choose their levels of debt and equity. First, we reexamine the herd migration hypothesis postulated by Patel, Zeckhauser and Hendricks in a 1991 American Economic Review paper. Unable to find support for their findings, we next hypothesize that firms may make financing decisions based on following some industry leader. We find only weak support for this hypothesis and conclude that firms act rationally with respect to financing decisions.

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Journal of Financial and Strategic Decisions
Volume 9, Number 2   Summer 1996

THE EFFECT OF EQUITY-FOR-DEBT SWAPS
ON SECURITY RETURNS: SOME NEW EVIDENCE

Rajiv Kalra
Moorhead State University

Kam C. Chan
University of Wisconsin- Parkside

Gary A. Raines
University of Cincinnati

Abstract
This study re-examines the effects of equity-for-debt swaps on security returns. Special attention is paid to the effects of the swaps across industries and calendar years. The results indicate that the market reactions to such swaps after 1984 (Deficit Reduction Act) are not significantly different than those before 1984. Moreover, we find that although there is a decrease in alpha and increase in beta of the market model during the announcement period, as expected, beta declines in the post swap period.

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Journal of Financial and Strategic Decisions
Volume 9, Number 2   Summer 1996

AN EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS OF MARKET AND INDUSTRY FACTORS
IN STOCK RETURNS OF U.S. AEROSPACE INDUSTRY

Sung C. Bae
Bowling Green State University

Gregory J. Duvall
Parker Hannifin Corporation

Abstract
This paper applies multi-archive_index CAPMs to explore the relationships of U.S. aerospace company stock returns to selected market and industry variables. This paper finds that the market returns represented by the S&P 500 archive_index and Department of Defense expenditures are significantly positively related to aerospace stock returns. The regression results on other variables are mixed; in particular, aircraft shipments are positively related to aerospace stock returns, but the relations are not significant. Additional regression analysis of employing unanticipated changes in independent variables provides confirmatory evidence. The results of this paper suggest that a multi-archive_index CAPM using selected economic and industry variables provides additional power in explaining the variability of U.S. aerospace stock returns over a single archive_index model using the market archive_index alone.

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