Determinants of Firms’ Propensity to Use Intercorporate Loans: Empirical Evidence from India

Several studies have investigated the determinants of firms’ capital structure choices. Though an intercorporate loan is an essential source of corporate debt, there are no studies that examine the determinants of firms’ preference to use the intercorporate loan as a source of debt. This study exami...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Biswajit Ghose, Prasenjit Roy, Yeshi Ngima, Kiran Gope, Pankaj Kumar Tyagi, Premendra Kumar Singh, Asokan Vasudevan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-04-01
Series:Risks
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9091/13/4/71
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Several studies have investigated the determinants of firms’ capital structure choices. Though an intercorporate loan is an essential source of corporate debt, there are no studies that examine the determinants of firms’ preference to use the intercorporate loan as a source of debt. This study examines the relevance of the conventional capital structure determinants in explaining firms’ tendency to use intercorporate loans. The study is based on a dataset of 53,112 firm-year observations comprising 3739 non-financial listed Indian firms for 21 years from 2002 to 2022. The random effect logistic regression model is used to investigate the objectives. The conventional capital structure determinants are relevant in explaining firms’ decisions to use intercorporate loans. Firm size, asset tangibility, and earnings volatility favorably influence the tendency to use intercorporate loans, whereas profitability, growth, uniqueness, dividend payment, ownership concentration, and foreign promoter holdings adversely affect the same. The results reveal that the influence of firm size, uniqueness, earnings volatility, and ownership concentration are not unidirectional for group-affiliated and standalone firms. The findings are mostly consistent with the arguments of conventional capital structure theories. The results of this study will be pragmatic for financial managers in their capital structure decisions.
ISSN:2227-9091