Why hedge? Rationales for corporate hedging and value implications
Abstract
Purpose
In the presence of capital market imperfections, risk management at the enterprise level is apt to increase the firm's value to shareholders by reducing costs associated with agency conflicts, external financing, financial distress, and taxes. The purpose of this paper is to provide an accessible and comprehensive account of these rationales for corporate risk management and to give a short overview of the empirical support found in the literature.
Design/methodology/approach
The paper outlines the main theories suggesting that corporate risk management can enhance shareholder value and briefly reviews the empirical evidence on these theories.
Findings
When there are imperfections in capital markets, corporate hedging can enhance shareholder value through its impact on agency costs, costly external financing, direct and indirect costs of bankruptcy, as well as taxes. More specifically, corporate hedging can alleviate underinvestment and asset substitution problems by reducing the volatility of cash flows, and it can accommodate the risk aversion of undiversified managers and increase the effectiveness of managerial incentive structures through eliminating unsystematic risk. Lower volatility of cash flows also leads to lower bankruptcy costs. Moreover, corporate hedging can also align the availability of internal resources with the need for investment funds, helping firms to avoid costly external financing. Finally, corporate risk management can reduce the corporate tax burden in the presence of convex tax schedules. While there is empirical support for these rationales of hedging at the firm level, the evidence is only modestly supportive, suggesting alternative explanations.
Originality/value
The discussed theories and the empirical evidence are described in an accessible way, in part by using numerical examples.
Keywords
Citation
Aretz, K., Bartram, S.M. and Dufey, G. (2007), "Why hedge? Rationales for corporate hedging and value implications", Journal of Risk Finance, Vol. 8 No. 5, pp. 434-449. https://doi.org/10.1108/15265940710834735
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2007, Emerald Group Publishing Limited