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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/28229
Title: Are firms as liquid as they appear in annual reports?
Authors: Khokhar, Abdul-Rahman
Qiu, Jiaping
Rahaman, Mohammad M.
Michael Lee-Chin & Family Institute for Strategic Business Studies
Keywords: Cash hike;Cash holdings;Within-year cash dynamics;Marginal value of cash
Publication Date: Dec-2022
Series/Report no.: Michael Lee-Chin & Family Institute for Strategic Business Studies Working Paper;2022-08
Abstract: We find that firms report significantly higher cash holdings in the fourth fiscal quarter, followed by subsequent reversal. Such a phenomenon cannot be explained by traditional determinants of cash holdings, calendar year-end effect, or the choice of fiscal-year-end quarter. We identify real and timing apparatuses that firms employ to maneuver such a cash hike within a fiscal year. Furthermore, the fourth-quarter cash hike appears to be more pronounced for informationally opaque firms requiring frequent access to external capital markets and for firms with reduced external monitoring and lower financial constraints. Our results suggest that within-year cash-holding dynamics are important in fully assessing the liquidity and credit-risk situations of firms. Valuation Insight Measures of corporate cash holdings may be a misleading indicator of liquidity and value. The paper uncovers that firms tend to report higher cash holding in their final fiscal quarter, which are subsequently reversed. The reversal effect is stronger for more opaque firms that access external capital markets more often and for firms with less external monitoring and fewer financial constraints.
Description: 43 p. ; Includes bibliographical references (pp. 28-30)
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/28229
Appears in Collections:Michael Lee-Chin and Family Institute for Strategic Business Studies
Michael Lee-Chin & Family Institute for Strategic Business Studies Working Paper Series

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