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Original Articles

Capital Structure Choices and Stock Market Volatility: Evidence from Chinese Listed Firms

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Abstract

An essential issue of listed firms is adjusting their capital structure as stock market volatility increases. Our study examines this concern by using panel data of the Shanghai Stock Exchange for the period 2008–2018. We find that stock market volatility has immediate positive effects on both total market leverage and short-term market leverage but a negative influence on the long-term market leverage of Chinese listed firms. In this scenario, Chinese listed firms adjust their debt structure by using high bank debts and cutting trade credit due to lower debt costs. Further analyses confirm that the proportion of bank debts to total debts visibly increases while that of trade credit to total debts distinctly decreases. Furthermore, we implement robust tests regarding potential issues, such as sample selection, model selection, endogenous factors, and quantile regression to strengthen the robustness of the main findings. This study provides the first framework for investigating a link between the stock market volatility and capital structure decisions in a typical emerging market.

Notes

1 The World Bank database provides annual China’s lending interest rate.

2 The annual volatility of China stock market in is calculated by the standard deviation of all daily stock returns of either the SSEC or SZSC for the same year.

3 The market capitalization of listed domestic companies (current US$). Data source: data.worldbank.org.

4 Newsfeeds from the website: cnbc.com on Friday, August 3rd, 2018.

5 The costs of bank debts account for the majority of the debt costs of Chinese firms (Liu & Zhang, Citation2015).

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