HFRC Working Paper Series
Publications
Our research findings contribute to the public debate on current financial and economic issues. By publishing our work in international academic journals and in our Working Paper Series, we aim to make it accessible to the widest possible audience.
HFRC Working Paper Series
Our working papers summarize the latest findings from the institute’s research activities. They are intended as contributions to academic discussion and are designed to encourage critical reflection and commentary on the results.
Publications by Meike Ahrends
Cyclicality of growth opportunities and the value of cash holdings
Meike Ahrends,
Wolfgang Drobetz,
Tatjana Xenia Puhan
Journal of Financial Stability | 08/2018
We show that business cycle dynamics and, in particular, the cyclicality of a firm’s growth opportunities, determine the value of corporate cash holdings. An additional dollar of cash is more valuable for firms with less procyclical expansion opportunities. This valuation effect is strongest for low leverage and high R&D firms, but is independent of their financial status. Corporate cash holdings provide the flexibility to invest for firms that have expansion opportunities during crisis times with business cycle downturns and supply-side financial constraints. Cash holdings in firms with less procyclical growth opportunities are associated with higher investment and better operating performance.
Corporate cash holdings in the shipping industry
Meike Ahrends,
Wolfgang Drobetz,
Nikos K. Nomikos
Transportation Research Part E: Logistics and Transportation Review | 04/2018
We examine the corporate cash holdings of listed shipping companies. Shipping firms hold more cash than similar firms in other asset-heavy industries. Higher cash holdings in the shipping industry are not attributable to firm- or country-level characteristics, but rather to the higher marginal value of cash. Shipping firms value an additional dollar of cash higher than matched manufacturing firms, regardless of their financial constraints status, but depending on their cultural background and the cyclicality of their expansion opportunities. Less procyclical shipping firms have a higher marginal value of cash, and this valuation effect is most pronounced in bad times of the business cycle when external capital supply tends to become scarce. Overall, it appears that shipping companies are more conservative than their peers in managing their cash positions.