Capital structure decisions: research in Estonian non‐financial companies
Abstract
Purpose
To investigate the relations between company‐specific financial factors and the capital structure decisions of Estonian non‐financial companies and to examine behavioral differences between companies of different sizes.
Design/methodology/approach
Totally 260 Estonian non‐financial companies are divided into small‐, medium‐ and large‐companies, each sample being analysed by correlation‐regression method in two aspects – impact of financial factors on static capital structure and capital structure dynamics. Companies' financial statements of 2002/2003 or 2003/2004 are used. Finally, capital structure adjustments in extreme boundaries are analyzed.
Findings
Capital structure decisions among Estonian non‐financial companies are driven by the pecking order theory, the evidences supporting optimal capital structure choices in long run remain weak. The robustness of the pecking order behavior significantly differs between smaller and bigger companies.
Research limitations/implications
Limited number of companies surveyed due to hard manual work required to adjust financial accounts. Implication of findings is somewhat limited as the study covers a single country.
Originality/value
The paper helps to identify financial drivers and to understand motivations behind capital structure decisions of emerging market companies and it supplements earlier studies. Quasi‐equity debt distorts the observed capital structures. Capital structure is adjusted for operating leases and quasi‐equity debt to identify true amount put at risk and its mix between owners and external lenders.
Keywords
Citation
Seppa, R. (2008), "Capital structure decisions: research in Estonian non‐financial companies", Baltic Journal of Management, Vol. 3 No. 1, pp. 55-70. https://doi.org/10.1108/17465260810844266
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2008, Emerald Group Publishing Limited