Understanding firms’ demand for cash is critical for answering many economic questions. We develop a model of firm dynamics allowing for heterogeneous size. The firm faces costly financing, fixed costs, and decreasing returns to scale. Surprisingly, the firm’s demand for cash is U-shaped in firm size. When the firm is small, growth lowers cash demand because the relative size of the fixed costs declines sharply. Eventually, growth increases cash demand as the scale of the cash flow shocks increases. Consequently, cash holdings and issuance amounts (payout rates) are U-shaped (hump-shaped) in firm size. We find empirical support for these predictions.


 

19 Jan 2023
9:30am - 10:30am
Where
https://cuhk.zoom.us/j/99697269848?pwd=L1B3ck1MVk83clBPejAxN1BxM1ZBQT09
Speakers/Performers
Prof. Max Reppen
Boston University
Organizer(S)
Department of Mathematics
Contact/Enquiries
Payment Details
Audience
Alumni, Faculty and staff, General public, PG students, UG students
Language(s)
English
Other Events
22 Nov 2024
Seminar, Lecture, Talk
IAS / School of Science Joint Lecture - Leveraging Protein Dynamics Memory with Machine Learning to Advance Drug Design: From Antibiotics to Targeted Protein Degradation
Abstract Protein dynamics are fundamental to protein function and encode complex biomolecular mechanisms. Although Markov state models have made it possible to capture long-timescale protein co...
8 Nov 2024
Seminar, Lecture, Talk
IAS / School of Science Joint Lecture - Some Theorems in the Representation Theory of Classical Lie Groups
Abstract After introducing some basic notions in the representation theory of classical Lie groups, the speaker will explain three results in this theory: the multiplicity one theorem for classical...