Abstract

PurposeThe paper aims to identify the differences between developed and developing country firms with respect to firm-specific and country-level determinants of their capital structure. For this purpose, all constituent firms in one of the oldest Islamic equity indices, Dow Jones Islamic Market World Index (DJIM), are considered and the Muslim-majority status of each firm's domicile country is recognized.Design/methodology/approachThe study employs Hausman–Taylor random effects regression with endogenous covariates to explain the debt ratios of firms in DJIM by separating them into developed and developing country subsamples in an unbalanced panel data setting. Developing country subsample is further split into two based on the Muslim-majority status of each firm's domicile country.FindingsConsistent with the previous literature, this study finds that firm-specific characteristics are the main determinants of their capital structure. Additionally, the paper shows that country-level characteristics have an impact on the debt ratio, however, the types of factors vary across developed and developing countries. Debt ratios in developing country firms are lower than those in developed country firms, largely due to the significantly smaller leverage ratios of firms in Muslim-majority countries. Although the debt ratios of DJIM firms are higher in “non-Muslim” countries, the set of firm-level capital structure determinants are not statistically explained by operating in a “Muslim” country. The study also documents that, before the global financial crisis of 2008, companies in developing countries have gradually become less leveraged worldwide.Originality/valueThis paper provides a new perspective into the differences between developed and developing country firms' capital structures by focusing on a relatively homogeneous data set restricted by leverage screening rules of an Islamic equity index and recognizing the Muslim-majority status of each firm's domicile country.

Highlights

  • In corporate finance, capital structure is one of the main areas of research

  • Despite the lower average debt ratio of Muslim-majority country firms observed in the univariate analyses, it appears that the capital structure of the companies included in Dow Jones Islamic Market World Index (DJIM) index is not affected by the main religion adopted in the firms’ country

  • This paper analyzes the firm- and country-level determinants of the capital structure of the firms selected to the Dow Jones Islamic Market World Index (DJIM)

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Summary

Introduction

Capital structure is one of the main areas of research. Since 1990s, great effort has been spent in order to understand how firms determine their sources of capital and what factors affect this structure. TDt;i: Total debt ratio at time t for firm i TDt−1;i: Total debt ratio at time t-1 for firm i (denoted by TDLAG in Table 5) Pt;i: Profitability (return on assets) at time t for firm i MH1t;i: Moral hazard 1 (inventory to assets ratio) at time t for firm i MH2t;i: Moral hazard 2 (tangible assets ratio) at time t for firm i Lt;i: Liquidity (current ratio) at time t for firm i St;i: Size (log (Sales)) at time t for firm i PBt;i: Price to book ratio at time t for firm i AZt;i: Altman Z-score at time t for firm i SMCt;j: Stock market capitalization as of GDP at time t of country j STRt;j: The strength of legal rights index for country j at time t INFt;j: Inflation rate at time t of country j GDPt;j: Gross Domestic Product growth at time t of country j Countryj: Country dummy Industryi: Fact Set sector category for firm i Yeart: Year dummy

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