Dr. Zabihollah Rezaee Published in The Quarterly Journal of Economics and Finance
MEMPHIS, TN—July 15, 2019. Dr. Zabihollah Rezaee, Thompson-Hill Chair of Excellence and professor of Accountancy in the Fogelman College of Business and Economics at the University of ҵ recently published in the premier The Quarterly Journal of Economics and Finance titled “Corporate Diversification, Debt Maturity Structures and Firm Value: The Role of Geographic Segment Data.” This paper is authored together by professors Olibe (Kansas State University), Flagg (Texas A&M University) and Ott (Kansas State University).
In this paper, the authors investigate whether foreign and domestic assets of US firms are financed with borrowed funds (e.g., with short- and long-term debt maturity structures). Regression analysis documents a positive association between foreign assets and long-term debt, and a negative association between foreign assets and short-term debt. There are also opposite relations between long-term (negative relation) and short-term (positive relation) and domestic fixed assets. Further findings show that foreign assets are incrementally, positively associated with Tobin’s q, indicating that foreign investment is a successful path to higher equity value.
In the partition sample, variation in debt affects the pricing of foreign assets. Specifically, foreign assets of high debt-to-asset ratios are positively related to Tobin’s q, whereas the relation is less positive for medium debt-to-asset ratio firms and insignificant for low debt-to-asset ratios, implying that near-all equity firms do not trade at a discount.
The article may be accessed via the following link.
Citation:
Rezaee, Z., Olibe, K., Flagg, J., and Ott, R., “Corporate Diversification, Debt Maturity Structures and Firm Value: The Role of Geographic Segment Data,” The Quarterly Review of Economics and Finance, May 2019.
