Hedging Behavior in Small and Medium-sized Enterprises The Role of Unobserved Heterogeneity.docx
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1、* Joost M.E. Pennings is an associate professor in the Department of Agricultural & Consumer Economics, Office for Futures & Options Research at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and the AST Distinguished professor in Commodity Futures Markets in the Department of Marketing & Consumer B
2、ehavior at the Wageningen University in the Netherlands. Philip Garcia is the Thomas A. Hieronymus professor in Futures Markets with the Office for Futures & Options Research at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Correspondence should be addressed to: Joost M.E. Pennings, Office for Fut
3、ures & Options Research, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 326 Mumford Hall, MC-710, 1301 W. Gregory Drive, Urbana, IL 61801. 0 Hedging Behavior in Small and Medium-sized Enterprises: The Role of Unobserved Heterogeneity Joost M.E. Pennings and Philip Garcia* Forthcoming Journal of Banking
4、 & Finance Copyright Elsevier Science * Joost M.E. Pennings is an associate professor in the Department of Agricultural & Consumer Economics, Office for Futures & Options Research at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and the AST Distinguished professor in Commodity Futures Markets in th
5、e Department of Marketing & Consumer Behavior at the Wageningen University in the Netherlands. Philip Garcia is the Thomas A. Hieronymus professor in Futures Markets with the Office for Futures & Options Research at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Correspondence should be addressed t
6、o: Joost M.E. Pennings, Office for Futures & Options Research, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 326 Mumford Hall, MC-710, 1301 W. Gregory Drive, Urbana, IL 61801. 1 Hedging Behavior in Small and Medium-sized Enterprises: The Role of Unobserved Heterogeneity Joost M.E. Pennings and Philip
7、Garcia* Abstract We investigate factors that drive derivative usage in small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs). The influence of these factors on hedging behavior cannot a priori be assumed equal for all SMEs. To address this heterogeneity, a generalized mixture regression model is used which clas
8、sifies firms into segments, so that the hedging response to the determinants of derivative usage is the same within each segment. Using a unique data set of 415 SMEs, containing both accounting and experimental data, we find that factors like risk exposure, risk perception, risk attitude, and the de
9、cision-making unit, among others are useful in explaining hedging behavior. However, the effects of these factors are not homogeneous across all managers, and the roots of the heterogeneity can partially be traced to differences in attitudes, perceptions, and to differences in ownership structure. J
10、EL Classification: C1; G0 Keywords: Derivatives Usage; Hedging Behavior; Unobserved Heterogeneity 2 1. Introduction Financial derivatives, such as futures and options, provide managers with tools to manage price risk. Derivative exchanges and financial institutions facilitate the exchange of these i
11、nstruments through over-the-counter trading. Recently, the competition among financial institutions that provide these services has increased, leading to customized financial products which fulfill user needs better. Accordingly, the interest of financial institutions in identifying the motivation b
12、ehind the derivative usage of different groups of (potential) users has increased (e.g., Fridson, 1992; Angel, Gastineau and Weber, 1997; Nesbitt and Reynolds, 1997). Froot, Scharfstein and Stein (1993), Nance, Smith and Smithson (1993), Mian (1996), Tufano (1996), Gczy, Minton and Schrand (1997), L
13、ee and Hoyt (1997), and Koski and Pontiff (1999) among others have conducted research on the determinants of derivative use. In these studies, large, often publicly-traded companies have been examined. Here, we expand the literature by studying the derivative usage of managers of small and medium- s
14、ized enterprises (SMEs). SMEs do not have different departments, nor do they have separate organizational structures to administer functions such as research & development, quality control, sales, and accounting. The management of these functions rests on one single manager. Moreover, the ownership
15、of SMEs is often concentrated. In such a structure, a managers risk aversion can provide an important motivation to manage risk (Mayers and Smith, 1982; Smith, 1995). The wealth of the manager often is directly affected by the variance of the SMEs expected profit, constituting an (extra) motivation
16、to consider hedging 3 (Smith and Stulz, 1985).1 SMEs also differ from large corporations in their capital structure, as bondholders are relatively scarce. Avery and Bostic (1998) and Berger and Udell (1998) show that private equity, bank loans, and personal commitments dominate the capital structure
17、 of SMEs. These differences motivate the importance of considering the managers, along with the firms, characteristics in the investigation of the determinants of derivative usage. We also build on previous work, by incorporating the notion that the motivations of enterprises to use derivatives as a
18、 hedging tool may not be homogenous. Firms from different regions or of different organizational structures may face dissimilar economic constraints and conditions that might lead to a different choice of derivatives. Similarly, managers may possess dissimilar objectives and motivations that can als
19、o result in different derivative decisions. This could be particularly relevant for SMEs, as they show a wide variety of organizational structures. Furthermore, managers of SMEs may have different risk attitudes and risk perceptions, suggesting that these firms may behave differently (e.g., Pennings
20、 and Smidts, 2000). Consequently, we may expect the factors that influence a firms choice of financial instrument to vary across segments of an industry, and common factors to influence firms differently. Clearly, this heterogeneity impacts the efforts of financial institutions in developing appropr
21、iate derivatives, particularly for customized products. Here, we model the effects of “unobserved heterogeneity” on the determinants of firms derivative usage. The term “unobserved heterogeneity” posits two interrelated ideas that are central to the empirical procedure we employ. The first notion is
22、 that not all managers respond similarly to a given change in the determinants of derivative use, but instead that 1 This is consistent with the notion that firms whose portfolios are poorly diversified have a stronger incentive to hedge (Smith, 1995). 4 segments of managers who behave in a similar
23、manner may exist. The second notion is that these segments are not directly observable prior to the analysis. Rather, they are determined by grouping together managers who reveal a similar relationship between the determinants of derivative use and their hedging behavior. In this context, we present
24、 a generalized linear mixture model that simultaneously investigates the relationship between managers derivative usage and a set of explanatory variables for each identified segment in the sample. We demonstrate how managers behave differently regarding derivative usage, and show the importance for
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