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Exploring the predictive ability of cost asymmetry on bankruptcy

Exploring the predictive ability of cost asymmetry on bankruptcy
Exploring the predictive ability of cost asymmetry on bankruptcy
This study explores whether cost asymmetry affects bankruptcy predictions. Cost asymmetry, driven by adjustment costs, empire-building behaviours, and managerial optimism, can reduce resource availability, liquidity, and earnings predictability, thereby increasing the risk of liquidity issues and potential bankruptcy. High cost asymmetry implies additional financing needs due to idle resources, which are less likely (or more costly) to be covered by retained earnings or capital market funds. Furthermore, elevated cost stickiness driven by intense empire-building consumes valuable resources and signals weaker governance and auditing efficiency, while increased managerial optimism heightens the risk to future operating performance. Using a sample of US publicly listed firms over the period 1990–2020, we provide empirical evidence that the level of cost asymmetry is incrementally useful for bankruptcy prediction. The fundamental factors of cost asymmetry, including adjustment costs and managerial incentives, reinforce its predictive ability to corporate bankruptcy. Additional robustness tests confirm our empirical results across (i) fluctuations in sales revenue, (ii) the effects of financial constraints on cost asymmetry, (iii) managerial and firm-specific characteristics, and (iv) propensity score-based partitioned samples.
1351-847X
Ntounis, Dimitrios
19ac142e-ff8d-4b34-b61f-904e2ad51064
Vlismas, Orestes
3aed83e8-e15f-4116-8a7b-9b2cc0540afe
Ntounis, Dimitrios
19ac142e-ff8d-4b34-b61f-904e2ad51064
Vlismas, Orestes
3aed83e8-e15f-4116-8a7b-9b2cc0540afe

Ntounis, Dimitrios and Vlismas, Orestes (2024) Exploring the predictive ability of cost asymmetry on bankruptcy. The European Journal of Finance (REJF). (doi:10.1080/1351847X.2024.2401047).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This study explores whether cost asymmetry affects bankruptcy predictions. Cost asymmetry, driven by adjustment costs, empire-building behaviours, and managerial optimism, can reduce resource availability, liquidity, and earnings predictability, thereby increasing the risk of liquidity issues and potential bankruptcy. High cost asymmetry implies additional financing needs due to idle resources, which are less likely (or more costly) to be covered by retained earnings or capital market funds. Furthermore, elevated cost stickiness driven by intense empire-building consumes valuable resources and signals weaker governance and auditing efficiency, while increased managerial optimism heightens the risk to future operating performance. Using a sample of US publicly listed firms over the period 1990–2020, we provide empirical evidence that the level of cost asymmetry is incrementally useful for bankruptcy prediction. The fundamental factors of cost asymmetry, including adjustment costs and managerial incentives, reinforce its predictive ability to corporate bankruptcy. Additional robustness tests confirm our empirical results across (i) fluctuations in sales revenue, (ii) the effects of financial constraints on cost asymmetry, (iii) managerial and firm-specific characteristics, and (iv) propensity score-based partitioned samples.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 26 August 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 September 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 497938
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/497938
ISSN: 1351-847X
PURE UUID: a8510ebc-1fa6-4830-84d7-03e069a91a2e
ORCID for Dimitrios Ntounis: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1819-0941

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Date deposited: 04 Feb 2025 18:00
Last modified: 15 Feb 2025 03:35

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Contributors

Author: Dimitrios Ntounis ORCID iD
Author: Orestes Vlismas

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