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Cash holding, trade credit and access to short-term bank finance

Kling, Gerhard; Paul, Salima; Gonis, Eleimon

Authors

Gerhard Kling

Salima Paul

Eleimon Gonis



Abstract

Since 1988, cash holding of the UK companies has increased from 10.6% to 16.4% of total assets. To explain this increase, we develop a panel vector autoregression and analyse the dynamics between cash holding and its closest substitutes, trade credit and short-term bank finance. Impulse response functions confirm the signalling theory, as trade credit facilitates access to bank finance. Firms experiencing liquidity shocks resort to cash or trade credit but not to bank finance. Cash holding improves access to trade credit. Additional cash and trade credit trigger a slowdown of the cash conversion cycle explained by agency theory. Cash-rich firms have accumulated more cash than predicted because of an unexpected decline in short-term debt, stressing the role of banks in explaining the increase in cash holding.

Citation

Kling, G., Paul, S., & Gonis, E. (2014). Cash holding, trade credit and access to short-term bank finance. International Review of Financial Analysis, 32, 123-131. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.irfa.2014.01.013

Journal Article Type Article
Online Publication Date Feb 3, 2014
Publication Date Mar 1, 2014
Deposit Date Feb 3, 2014
Journal International Review of Financial Analysis
Print ISSN 1057-5219
Electronic ISSN 1873-8079
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 32
Pages 123-131
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.irfa.2014.01.013