Abstract

The influence of market sentiments on the bankruptcy risk propensity of firms has been extensively explored in the literature. However, less attention has been paid to whether the corporate life cycle plays any role in this nexus. The purpose of this research is to unveil how the corporate bankruptcy risk propensity responds to market sentiments, and whether this sentiments–risk relationship varies over different stages of the corporate life cycle. Using a sample of 301 Pakistani non-financial listed firms for 2005–2014, we employ two-step generalized method of moments (GMM) regression estimation to address the issue of endogeneity. Empirical evidence reveals that managers tend to escalate a firm’s bankruptcy risk during high market sentiments. Further analysis indicates that during the period of positive market sentiments, introduction stage firms prefer to assume the highest bankruptcy risk followed by decline and growth firms, while mature firms continue to be risk-averse. This research contributes to the corporate finance literature by suggesting that managerial risk-taking is influenced by market sentiments and corporate managers show a different attitude towards risk at different stages of the corporate life cycle. Therefore, to ensure enterprise sustainability, capital market regulators should have a robust risk management framework in place to discipline the excessive risk-taking by firm managers over different stages of the corporate life cycle. Moreover, investors and creditors shall take into consideration the respective life cycle stage of the firm to minimize the risk exposure of their investment portfolios. Our results are robust to alternate econometric specifications and alternate variable specifications.

Highlights

  • Traditional finance theory proposes that in an efficient market, asset prices must equate to the present value of their prospective future cash flows (Brzeszczynski et al 2015)

  • Consistent with Hypothesis 1 (H1), we find positive and statistically significant coefficients of SENT for Z-score suggesting that firms assume greater insolvency risk during the period of high market sentiments

  • From a life cycle perspective, the interaction variable SENT*Intro has a significant positive association with bankruptcy risk The reported coefficients indicate an increase in bankruptcy risk in the period of high market sentiments

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Summary

Introduction

Traditional finance theory proposes that in an efficient market, asset prices must equate to the present value of their prospective future cash flows (Brzeszczynski et al 2015). Assuming the efficient-market hypothesis (EMH), asset prices reflect all the information about the fundamental value of the underlying security. Movements in the stock market shall originate only with the new information about the fundamental value of the underlying security (Zhang 2008). To explain market anomalies, behavioral finance takes account of deviations from hyper-rationality due to investor sentiments and explores how this may affect asset prices, market outcomes, and the behavior of other investors (Zhang 2008; Shi et al 2020). By following recent studies (Al Samman and Al-Jafari 2015; Abdelhedi-Zouch and Ghorbel 2016), we used trading volume as a proxy to measure the market sentiments (hereafter, SENT) proposed by Baker and Stein (2004). We tend to agree with their line of argument that high trading volume or market liquidity is a sign of overvaluation by irrational investors. High market liquidity is an indicator of the positive sentiments of irrational investors

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