企业投资对股市错估的敏感性

IF 3.6 Q1 BUSINESS, FINANCE
Senda Mrad, Taher Hamza, Riadh Manita
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的研究股票市场错估对经理人行为的影响。利用2000年至2018年期间535家法国上市公司的样本,作者分析了企业投资决策是否对股市高估敏感。本研究采用了由Rhodes-Kropf和Viswanathan (2004, RKV)开发的市场对账面价值(M/B)分解方法,该方法代表了公司和行业层面的市场错误估值。作者通过投资组合排序程序和Carhart(1997)四因素定价模型进行了长期绩效分析。作者检验了股票错估、公司投资决策和股票发行之间的关系。作者进行了几次稳健性测试。实证结果表明,随着股票价格进一步偏离其基本面,股票市场估值错误对企业投资产生积极影响。基于市场择时理论,作者发现公司投资发生在股票发行的高估值时期,以受益于较低的资金成本。这种效应在资金紧张的公司中更为突出。与迎合渠道一致,作者发现,在拥有短线投资者的公司中,错误估值与投资的联系更为明显。通过对投资组合进行分类,研究了被低估公司的股票长期表现,作者发现,被低估的公司比估值过高的公司表现更好,并产生更高的异常回报(Jensen’s alpha),这表明,被错误定价驱动的投资似乎是短暂的,并导致长期回报较低。实践启示公司决策者和治理结构应关注股权市场错估背景下公司投资决策的合理性。以牺牲长期业绩为代价,追求股票市场短期价值最大化的经理人,必须优先考虑创造价值的投资,而不是受股票市场错误定价等外部机制的驱动。更普遍的是,投资者和投资组合经理在决策时必须考虑到市场错误定价的过程。尽管如此,从投资组合排序的角度来看,决策者必须在高治理质量方面采取行动,以减轻由于股票市场错误定价而导致的次优投资(Jensen, 2005)。最后,股市估值过高——尤其是导致基金经理通过股权融资进行投资——应该是一个信号,以吸引投资者的注意力,抓住机会之窗,采取短期投资组合策略。这种策略有望在短期内获得高回报。本文联合研究了两个理论渠道:股票市场时机和餐饮。为了将企业和行业层面的市场错误估值与市场价值的基本组成部分(增长)分离开来,作者提出了M/B分解的三个组成部分来进行分析。这一过程有助于更好地理解企业和行业估值错误在解释公司投资中的作用。作者通过投资组合分类程序和Carhart(1997)四因素定价模型提供了股票市场错误估值的证据。本文研究了估值错估对投资决策和融资决策的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Corporate investment sensitivity to equity market misvaluation

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to investigate the effect of equity market misvaluation on manager behavior. Using a sample of 535 French-listed over 2000–2018, the authors analyze whether corporate investment decision is sensitive to equity market overvaluation.

Design/methodology/approach

The study adopts market-to-book (M/B) decomposition developed by Rhodes-Kropf and Viswanathan (2004, RKV) that proxies for market misvaluation at the firm and industry levels. The authors conducted a long-term performance analysis via a portfolio sorting procedure and a Carhart (1997) four-factor pricing model. The authors tested the relationship between equity misvaluation, corporate investment decisions and equity issuance. The authors ran several robustness tests.

Findings

The empirical results show that equity market misvaluation affects corporate investment positively as the stock price deviates further away from its fundamental. Based on market timing theory, the authors find that corporate investment occurs in periods of high valuation motivated by equity issuance to benefit from the low cost of capital. This effect is more prominent for financially constrained firms. Consistent with the catering channel, the authors find that the misvaluation-investment nexus is more pronounced in firms with short-horizon investors. By examining the stocks’ long-term performance of misvalued firms, via a sorting portfolio procedure, the authors find that undervalued firms outperform and generate higher abnormal returns (Jensen’s alpha) than overvalued firms, suggesting that mispricing-driven investment appear to be short-lived and lead to lower return in the long term.

Practical implications

Corporate decision-makers and governance structures should pay attention to the rationality of the corporate investment decision in the context of equity market misvaluation. Managers who focus on maximizing the stock market value in the short-run at the expense of its long-term performance must give preference to value-creating investment, not driven by an external mechanism such as equity market mispricing. More generally, investors and portfolio managers must take into account the market mispricing process in decision-making. Nonetheless, from the portfolio sorting perspective, decision-makers must act in terms of high governance quality to mitigate suboptimal investment due to stock market mispricing (Jensen, 2005). Finally, equity market overvaluation, leading managers to invest via equity financing in particular, should be a signal to attract investors’ attention to seize the window of opportunity and embark on a short-term portfolio strategy. Such a strategy promises high returns in the short term.

Originality/value

This paper investigates jointly two theoretical channels: equity market timing and catering. The authors propose for the analysis three components of the M/B decomposition to dissociate market misvaluation at the firm and industry level from the fundamental component of market value (growth). This procedure provides a better understanding of the role of firm and industry misvaluation in explaining corporate investments. The authors provide evidence of the equity market misvaluation via a portfolio sorting procedure and a Carhart (1997) four-factor pricing model. The authors examine the effect of misvaluation on both the investment and the financing decisions.

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CiteScore
4.30
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