THE DETERMINANTS OF CAPITAL STRUCTURE: THE CASE OF LONG-TERM DEBT CONSTRAINT FOR JORDANIAN FIRMS

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Rami Zeitun ORCID logo, Gary Gang Tian ORCID logo

https://doi.org/10.22495/cocv6i1p3

Abstract

This paper contributes to the capital structure literature by investigating the determinants of capital structure of Jordanian companies with the constraint of inadequate long-term debt as their source of financing and regional risk. We firstly document that Jordanian companies mostly depend on short-term debt, as a result of the banking credit policy that promotes short-term debt. Our results suggest that the level of gearing in Jordanian firms is positively related to size, tangibility, and earning volatility, and negatively correlated to profitability, the level of growth opportunities, liquidity and stock market activities. The level of gearing measured by short-term debt is, however, negatively correlated to tangibility. The Gulf Crisis between 1990 and 1991 is also found to have a significant but positive impact on Jordanian corporate leverage. We conclude that the capital structure decision with inadequate long-term debt access is influenced more strongly by factors such as Stock‟s Market activity (SMA).

Keywords: Capital Structure, Determinants, Jordan

How to cite this paper: Zeitun, R., & Tian, G. (2008). The determinants of capital structure: The case of long-term debt constraint for Jordanian firms. Corporate Ownership & Control, 6(1), 22-37. https://doi.org/10.22495/cocv6i1p3