Cash Holding Adjustments and Managerial Entrenchment
January 04, 2016
We
find that, on average, firms close 31% of their gap between target and
actual cash ratio each year. The adjustment speed is generally swifter
if the actual cash ratio exceeds the target ratio, possibly because it
is cheaper to disgorge cash than it is to raise it. But as firms become
more insulated from the threat of takeovers, they decelerate their cash
adjustment at high cash ratios. This evidence suggests that
self-interested managers are reluctant to disburse excess cash, and they
will allow cash levels to remain high unless the firms are subject to
external pressure.