FIN-01-011 |
NYU Stern School of Business |
Geographic Diversification and Agency Costs of Debt of Multinational Firms
October 3, 2001
John A. Doukas and Christos Pantzalis
ABSTRACT
This paper examines the agency conflicts between shareholders and bondholders of multinational and non-multinational
firms and provides an explanation for the puzzle that multinational firms use less long-term debt
but more short-term debt than domestic firms. Using a sample of 6,951 firm-year observations for multinational
and domestic firms over the 1988-1994 period, we find that alternative measures of agency costs have
statistically significant negative effects on firm long-term leverage. The results, however, also show that the
negative effects of agency costs of debt on long-term leverage are significantly greater for multinational than
non-multinational firms. It is documented that the effect of the agency costs of debt on leverage are increased
by the firm’s degree of foreign involvement. The evidence shows that firm’s increasing foreign involvement
exacerbates agency costs of debt leading to lower (greater) use of long-term (short-term) debt financing. This
result is also confirmed using alternative measures of foreign involvement. The evidence is consistent with the
view that multinational corporations are susceptible to higher agency costs of debt than domestic corporations
because geographic diversity renders active monitoring more difficult and expensive in comparison to domestic
firms. The results fail to support the view that MNCs’ lower long-term debt ratios are due to the advantages of
the internal capital markets.
John A. Doukas
Institution: Leonard N. Stern School of Business, New York University
Telephone: 212-998-0432
Fax: 212-995-4233
Email: jdoukas@stern.nyu.edu
Home Page: http://www.stern.nyu.edu/~jdoukas/
Christos Pantzalis
Institution: College of Business Administration, University of South Florida
Telephone: (813) 974-6326
Fax: (813) 974-3030
Email: cpantzal@coba.usf.edu
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