Abstract

PurposeDebt, dividend and investment policy constitutes a company's important financial decisions to determine firm performance. The research emphasizes on the problem of overinvestment, a phenomenon that worsens firm operation. Furthermore, it clarifies the moderation role of debt and dividend policy in mitigating the negative effect of overinvestment on firm performance in the case of Vietnamese listed companies.Design/methodology/approachThe research uses all financial statement of non-financial Vietnamese listed companies on Ho Chi Minh and Hanoi Stock Exchange in the period of 2008–2018. The data are collected from Thomson Reuters Eikon. The final data set is comprised of 669 listed companies. The study measures overinvestment though investment demand function and HP filter. Moreover, the research employs the dynamic model, so it has to apply the SGMM method to deal with the problem of endogeneity caused by the lagged dependent variable.FindingsThe research finds that overinvestment is negatively associated with firm performance. Debt or dividend policy separately can moderate the negative effect of overinvestment on firm performance. However, when these two policies are combined, they lessen the positive interaction impact of each policy due to the substitution between debt and dividend policy.Research limitations/implicationsThe research may have two limitations. Firstly, the research measures overinvestment indirectly through investment demand function and HP filter. These two measures only help identify the sign that companies may have the problem of overinvestment because we cannot determine whether they overinvest or not in reality. Secondly, when using interaction variables, the problem of multicollinearity may be higher, and this may adjust the signs and significance level of variables in the models.Practical implicationsPractically, the research proposes three policy recommendations. Firstly, a company can exploit debt or dividend policy to limit excessive free cash flow in order to constrain the problem of overinvestment. Secondly, a company should enhance its corporate governance to resolve agency problems. Thirdly, the government should make the financial sector more transparent and effective to improve monitoring functions of various parties in the capital market.Social implicationsOverinvestment sometimes can cause social issues. Overinvestment means that companies make ineffective investment. If they continue this situation over a long time, companies may have financial distress or even go bankruptcy. As a result, it will slow down economic growth and increase unemployment in the economy.Originality/valueThe research is supposed to make two great contributions to the existing empirical studies in two aspects. Firstly, it is the first attempt to take into consideration the interaction between overinvestment and financial policies. Secondly, it helps enhance the fundamental stance of the agency theory, which supports the interdependence of debt, dividend and investment policy.

Highlights

  • Financial policies including debt, dividend and investment policy constitute an important triad within corporate enterprises (Alli et al, 1993; Baker and Powell, 2000)

  • The marginal effect of debt shows that if companies do not pay out dividends and do not have overinvestment, financial leverage will have a negative effect on firm performance

  • The results show that overinvestment can positively regulate the negative relationship between dividend policy and firm performance

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Summary

Introduction

Dividend and investment policy constitute an important triad within corporate enterprises (Alli et al, 1993; Baker and Powell, 2000). Our results support the agency theory, which suggests the interdependence among debt, dividend and investment policy These findings and contributions can give shareholders certain recommendations in resolving agency problem within corporate enterprises. Reduction in free cash flow is a solution to the expropriating behaviours of managers (Jensen, 1986; Ali et al, 2019) In this situation, both debt and dividend policy can help restrain the bad effect of overinvestment with lower free cash flow in corporate enterprises and better monitoring tasks from outside parties (Rozeff, 1982; Easterbrook, 1984; Jensen, 1986; Alli et al, 1993; Biddle et al, 2009; Al-Najjar and Kilincarslan, 2019; Cho et al, 2019). The research uses the unbalanced panel data policy on overinvestment for the regression model

Model specification
Results
The marginal effect of debt
The marginal effect of dividend
The marginal effect of overinvestment
Conclusion
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