Capital Structure Dynamics and
Financing Imbalance: Evidence
from an Emerging Economy
Biswajit Ghose
1
Kailash Chandra Kabra
2
Abstract
This paper considers the trade-off and pecking order theory in a unified framework and examines
the influence of adverse selection costs on target adjustment process by investigating the relationship
between firms’ financing imbalance and their target adjustment speed. Using a large dataset of 2718
non-financial and non-utility listed firms over a period of 2004–2005 to 2015–2016, the study observes
that Indian firms adjust toward target leverage with a moderate adjustment speed of 32–36 percent.
Moreover, firms with above-target debt make faster adjustment than firms with below-target debt, and
firms with financing deficit make faster adjustment than firms with financing surplus. The extensions of
target adjustment model by considering financing imbalance and direction of deviation together, and also
by incorporating extent of deviation further reveal that firms try to avoid equity and prefer to deal in
debt while making adjustments toward the target. In fact, firms deal in equity only when they are highly
deviated from target leverage. All these findings suggest that adverse selection costs play significant role
in the adjustment process. Therefore, though capital structure decisions of Indian firms are guided by
trade-off theory, significance of pecking order arguments cannot be negated.This study makes important
contributions to the existing literature as prior studies on impact of financing imbalance on adjustment
speed are based on US which is very much different from emerging economies, particularly India.
Keywords
Capital structure, adjustment speed, trade-off theory, pecking order theory, partial adjustment model,
financing imbalance
Article
1
Department of Management, Mizoram University, Aizawl, Mizoram, India.
2
Department of Commerce, North-Eastern Hill University, Shillong, Meghalaya, India.
Corresponding author:
Biswajit Ghose, Assistant Professor, Department of Management, Mizoram University Aizawl, Mizoram-796004, India.
E-mail: biswajitghose84@gmail.com
Emerging Economy Studies
1–22
© 2019 International
Management Institute
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DOI: 10.1177/2394901519870766
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Introduction
The importance of capital structure decision to a
corporation is well documented in extant literature.
The substantial growth in number of both
theoretical and empirical studies related to firms’
capital structure choice subsequent to the seminal
work of Modigliani and Miller (1958) itself