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On the Capital Structure of Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs)


                      Zhilan Feng, Chinmoy Ghosh and C. F. Sirmans*




                                                Abstract


         Much of the literature on capital structure excludes Real Estate Investment Trusts
(REITs) due mainly to the unique regulatory environment of these firms. As such, the issue of
how REITs choose among different financing options when they raise external capital is largely
unexplored. In this paper, we examine the capital structure of REITs to answer two questions: is
there a relationship between market-to-book and leverage ratios? and, does market-to-book have
a temporary or a long-term impact on leverage ratios? Our results suggest that REITs with high
market-to-book ratios have high leverage ratios, and historical market-to-book has long-term
persistent impact on current leverage ratio. We interpret these findings as supportive of pecking
order theory. When financing costs of adverse selection exceed costs of financial distress,
pecking order is more relevant in explaining the cross-sectional variation in capital structure.




Zhilan Feng is at School of Management, the Graduate College of Union University, Chinmoy Ghosh and C. F.
Sirmans are at the Center for Real Estate and Urban Economic Studies at the School of Business, University of
Connecticut, Storrs, CT, USA. All correspondence may be addressed to Zhilan Feng at fengz@union.edu.
On the Capital Structure of Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs)


I.      Introduction and Motivation


        This paper explores how the capital structure of Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs)
evolves over time. Much of the traditional literature in finance tends to exclude regulated firms
because regulation is often designed to address the very same market imperfections that theory
focuses on. The first motivation of our paper primarily draws from the unique regulatory
environment REITs operate in. REITs were primarily created as an investment vehicle for
institutions that tended to avoid investing in real estate assets because of lack of transparency and
liquidity. In essence, the regulation on REITs are geared more to induce investment than to
prevent neglect of fiduciary responsibility.
        There are mainly three good reasons to issue debt. One, it raises cash. Two, interest
payments are tax deductible so that the tax shield adds value to the firm. Three, the mandatory
interest payment on debt mitigates the agency cost of managerial proclivity to waste cash on poor
investments. On the negative side, borrowing exposes the firm to bankruptcy costs; and, leverage
may prompt managers to avoid profitable investments to minimize transfer of wealth to
bondholders. Like debt, equity raises cash, but issue costs can be significant if investors discount
the value of shares out of concern that managers issue shares only when they are overvalued. On
balance, debt appears to be the less costly alternative. Over the years, the search for an optimal
capital structure has been largely empirical, albeit elusive.
        A second, and potentially more interesting, motivation of our research is the recent
controversy about which theory best describes the prevalent practice in firms’ financing choices.
The trade-off theory states that an optimal capital structure exists and this is characterized by the
trade off between benefits and costs of borrowing. Among the benefits, the most significant is the
tax deductibility of interest payments, but costs of financial distress can be substantial. While
firms deviate from the optimum capital structure in the short term, the long term capital structure
is invariant. The theory implies that adjustments in capital structure in response to fluctuations in
valuation of the firm, and capital needs are temporary; capital structure regresses to the optimal
level in the long run. The evidence on actual capital structure choices lends only scant support to
the trade off theory.




                                                                                                        1
The pecking order theory developed by Myers and Majluf (1984) is more potent simply
because it provides a better description of actual managerial behavior. The model, based on
information asymmetry between shareholder and managers, says that if managers are more
informed than shareholders about the firm’s prospects, they would be tempted to sell new shares
only when they are overvalued. Wary shareholders will anticipate this and revalue shares
downwards. Under this scenario, stock prices will always react negatively to equity issues.
Consequently, managers who act in shareholders’ interest will always avoid issuing new stock,
and prefer issuing less risky debt instead. This implies that high growth firms, particularly those
with insufficient free cash flow will have high debt ratios. A more dynamic version of the theory
states that high growth firms may reduce leverage and use retained earnings for current
investment to avoid issuing equity if and when need for additional funds arises in the future. An
important implication of the theory is that no optimal capital structure exists, rather capital
structure evolves in response to the firm’s investment opportunities. Shyam-Sunder and Myers
(1999) report evidence consistent with the pecking order theory.
         A third theory, known as the market timing theory [Baker and Wurgler (2003)], is more
behavioral in nature and scope and simply states that long-term capital structure is merely a
manifestation of manager’s attempts to time equity issues to coincide with high market valuation.
According to this theory, firms with high growth and investment opportunities have high market
values and tend to issue equity more often, resulting in low leverage ratios. The idea is that if
market associates high market values with low adverse selection costs, that presents high growth
firms with the opportunity to issue equity at an advantage. It is noteworthy that the market timing
theory and the simple pecking order theory have opposite implications for the relation between
market values and debt ratios. Neither theory identifies an optimal capital structure, however.
        A final question that has attracted considerable attention is whether changes in capital
structure are permanent. Trade off theory implies that any change in capital structure is
temporary and firms regress to the long term optimum over time. There is no such implication
under the pecking order or the market timing theories. An evidence of a permanent relation
between the need (investment opportunities) and sources (financing choices) of capital is
sufficient to unequivocally reject the trade off theory.
        While the theoretical underpinnings of the theories are well developed, the empirical
evidence is mixed, at best. It is only recently that the empirical enquiries have focused on the
dynamics of the evolution of capital structure over time. Shyam-Sunder and Myers (1999) claim
support for the pecking order theory, Frank and Goyal (2002) refute it, and Fama and French
(2002) report findings consistent with, and contrary to both trade off and pecking order stories. In



                                                                                                      2
the most comprehensive analysis of market timing theory to date, Baker and Wurgler (2002)
interpret the evidence to be in conformity with the market timing theory to the exclusion of the
other two. It is worth noting all studies of capital structure decisions over time reject trade off
theory unequivocally.
         Because of their unique regulatory environment, we contend, REITs are an ideal
laboratory setting to provide additional evidence on these competing theories. First, REITs do
not pay any taxes if 95% of taxable earnings are paid out as dividends. Second, high payout
implies that REITs have low free cash flow, such that managers have little opportunity to waste
cash on non value-maximizing acquisitions. REITs face the usual costs of financial distress,
however. Absence of tax deductibility of interest payments, and reduced agency conflict,
immediately suggest REITs should have no debt in their capital structure. The anecdotal
evidence is clearly inconsistent with this notion.1
         The requirement that 95% of the taxable earnings be paid out as dividends forces REITs
to raise funds from the capital market where debt is a less attractive alternative than taxable firms,
and the agency cost benefit of debt is also muted. Turning to equity, however, entails the costs of
adverse selection which must be borne by the existing shareholders. We argue that these costs
are particularly severe for REITs. For example, monitoring REIT managers calls for special
skills and knowledge about general and local economic trends, conditions of comparable
properties, complex financing arrangements, other specialized skills, and even inside information
[Han (2004)]. In addition, since REITs are involved in real property transactions that include a
wide range of heterogeneous, illiquid assets, it is difficult for shareholders to determine the fair
market values of these transactions. This results in lack of transparency which makes monitoring
of managers critical. As Ghosh and Sirmans (2001, 2003, 2004), and Han (2004) observe,
however, REITs must abide by special regulations that can weaken or render ineffective the
standard governance mechanisms. To elaborate, to qualify as a REIT, the firm must maintain a
diversified ownership with at least 100 shareholders, the five biggest of which may not own more
than 50 percent of the total shares outstanding. Campbell et al. (2001) contribute the lack of
hostile takeovers among REITs to this regulation. This unique ownership structure diminishes
the effectiveness of monitoring by the market for corporate control, and exacerbates the lack of
transparency. In essence, issuing equity is a particularly costly proposition for REITs. Under
this scenario, pecking order theory predicts financing first with retained earnings, then debt, and


1
 Brown and Riddiough (2003) reports that over the period September 1993 to March 1998, REITs made a 120 debt
offerings of $133m each, on average.




                                                                                                               3
equity last. Since retained earnings are very low for REITs, pecking order leans heavily towards
debt financing.
        Finally, market timing theory suggests that managers look for opportunities to time
equity issues when adverse selection costs are low. It may be argued that these opportunities are
relatively scarce for REITs because of lack of transparency and incomplete monitoring. In
summary, the trade off prediction of all equity contradicts anecdotal evidence, pecking order calls
for predominantly debt financing, and market timing suggests selling equity if opportunities exist.
We suggest that REITs will prefer to issue debt whenever the cost of discounted equity exceeds
the cost of financial distress, and equity otherwise. The choice of financing is essentially an
empirical issue. The clear advantage with REITs is that because of low retained earnings, the
financing decision may come down to a simple choice between debt and equity.
        To determine how capital structure evolves over time, and the persistence of capital
structure change, a time series analysis of the relation between needs and sources of financing
must be conducted. Baker and Wurgler (2002) study the firms’ financing decision from the initial
public offering (IPO). Conceivably, issuing debt is not appealing at the IPO stage because young
firms are considered more risky. As the firm matures, financing decisions reflect both pure
adjustments (if any) in capital structure and need for investment funds.   It is generally assumed
that need for funds is a function of the firm’s investment and growth opportunities and the
standard sources of capital include retained earnings and security issuances. The standard proxy
for need for funds is the market value to book value ratio, the assumption being that high market
value reflects market’s assessment that the firm has access to profitable investment opportunities.
        We analyze the capital structure decisions of REITs over the period 1992 to 2003 using
the same approach as Baker and Wurgler (2002). Over this period, we follow the REITs from the
year they go IPO to the last surviving year. The sample size is therefore driven by the IPO
activity of REITs. The most active years were 1994, 1995 and 1996 when over 50 REIT IPOs
raised capital. The smallest sample size is 4 in 1992, steadily growing to the largest sample size
of 108 in 2003. We use market to book ratio as a proxy for investment opportunities and firm’s
need for capital. The analyses based on contemporaneous data reveal a weakly significant
positive relation between M/B ratio and leverage, strongly negative relation between M/B ratio
and net equity issues, and weak relation between M/B and retained earnings. The long term
weighted average M/B ratio is a strongly significant determinant for leverage ratio which
suggests that the effect on M/B ratio on leverage is not transient and firms do not adjust their
leverage ratios to a target level. The long-term persistence of leverage decisions is inconsistent
with the trade off theory. The long-term as well as the contemporaneous evidence is not



                                                                                                     4
consistent with the market timing theory. We find weak evidence in favor of the pecking order
theory from the yearly analysis, but strong support from the long-term regressions results.
        The findings for REIT are intriguing in that they are contrary to the recent evidence in
Baker and Wurglar (2002) for a broader data set, and subject to interpretation vis-a-vis the
conclusions in Brown and Riddiough’s (2003) analysis of REIT capital structure. Baker and
Wurglar find evidence in line with the market timing theory. A potential explanation for the
differential findings is that the window of opportunity when adverse selection costs are low is less
frequent and narrower for REITs. The lack of transparency of real estate assets, and the
consequent information asymmetry is a contributing factor. Reinforcing the problem is the
restrictive ownership requirements in REITs which makes it difficult for blockholders to form
ownership stakes, and diminishes their incentive to monitor management. A sheltered
management widens the credibility gap between shareholders and managers.
        Brown and Riddiough (2003) analyze public issues by REITs over the years 1993-1998
and document several stylized characteristics of these offers. An important finding is that offer
spreads are positively related to maturity, which suggests that if performance improves and
market value increases over time, market expects REITs to sell more debt so that, ex ante, offer
spreads are higher for longer maturity issues. The authors further report that REITs use public
issue proceeds primarily for investment purposes so that security sales often induce capital
structure changes. These findings are consistent with the existence of a target leverage ratio as
suggested by the trade off theory. However, testing the theories of capital structure requires that a
time series analysis of financing decisions be undertaken. In the short run, trade off and pecking
order (market timing) theories make similar predictions for firms that are underleveraged
(overleveraged). Long run analysis facilitates separating the alternative theories.
        The paper proceeds as follows. Section II summarizes the prior research on capital
structure. Section III develops the hypotheses under the regulatory environment of REITs.
Section IV describes the data. We present and discuss our models and results in section V, and
conclude in section VI.


II.     Literature Review
A.      Tradeoff Theory


        Tradeoff theory posits that the firm has a target debt ratio which is determined by the
tradeoff between the costs and benefits of borrowing, with the firm’s assets and investment plans
held constant. The most significant benefit of debt financing is the tax shield of interest



                                                                                                     5
payments. Mandatory interest payment reduces free cash flow which mitigates the agency
conflict between securityholders and managers. This implies higher leverage and payout ratios
for profitable firms, and the opposite for firms with more investments. The cost of financial
distress is the major downside of debt financing. Further, from the shareholders’ perspective,
leverage may induce managers of struggling firms to avoid profitable investments because most
of the benefit accrues to the debtholders.
        Marsh (1982) studies the security issuances by UK companies between 1959 and 1974.
He documents that companies which are below their long term or above their short term debt
targets are more likely to issue debt. Firm size, cost of financial distress and asset composition
were the significant determinants of firm’s leverage ratio. He also finds some evidence for the
market timing theory. Specifically, the results demonstrate that firms with large share price
increases tend to issue equity, and prevailing market conditions influence firms’ finance
decisions. Titman and Wessels (1998) find that debt ratio is negatively related to the
‘uniqueness’ of a firm’s line of business, and interpret this result as supportive of tradeoff theory.
They also report that transaction costs are an important determinant of leverage ratios, and past
profitability tends to reduce a firm’s debt level. The latter evidence is more in line with the
pecking order theory. Rajan and Zingales (1995) use a sample of corporations from G-7
countries to investigate the capital structure choices across countries. They find some evidence
consistent with tradeoff theory. For example, tangibility is positively correlated with leverage in
all countries. Consistent with market timing, the market-to-book ratio has a significant and
consistently negative relationship with leverage in all countries. Size is positively correlated with
leverage and profitability is negatively correlated with leverage in all countries except Germany.
These can be interpreted as generally consistent with the tradeoff theory. As the authors point
out, however, a deeper examination of the evidence suggests that the current capital structure
models fail to fully explain the observed patterns.
        Under the tradeoff theory, deviations from target capital structure are only temporary. In
a dynamic setting, firms make financing choices to adjust the debt ratio to the long-term optimum
which implies that no systematic relation between debt ratio and the firm’s investment
opportunities is predicted. However, if costs of financial distress varies across firms, a cross
sectional variation in optimum capital structure is expected. For example, high-growth firms that
are more sensitive to fluctuations in business outlook and are therefore more vulnerable due to the
costs of financial distress, choose to use less debt financing. Highly profitable firms, on the other
hand, can risk higher debt ratios. The findings in Smith and Watts (1992) and Barclay, Morellec,
and Smith (2001) are consistent with this notion.



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B.      Pecking Order Theory


        Developed by Mayers (1984) and Mayers and Majluf (1984), the pecking order assumes
that managers have privileged information regarding the firm’s value that investors do not have.
This raises the potential that opportunistic managers will sell equity only when it is overvalued.
New shareholders will therefore avoid or discount equity which implies that only poorly
performing firms will have the incentive to issue equity. The avoidance of adverse selection cost
is the main motivation for firms to prefer the safest security available, which means that firms
always choose debt over equity if bankruptcy costs are not an immediate concern. Hence, high
growth firms that need more external capital end up with high leverage ratio. The dynamic
pecking order theory, however, predicts that, holding profitability constant, firms with more
investment opportunities keep payout low to conserve funds, and maintain low leverage to
preserve debt capacity so as not to be forced into high debt in the future. These firms are forced
to have high leverage only if adjustments in dividend payout are difficult, and investment
commitments are persistently large. On the other hand, holding investments fixed, more
profitable firms have higher payout ratios and lower leverage ratios because they have larger cash
reserves, and can withstand adversities better.
        Shyam-Sunder and Myers (1999) study a sample of mature corporations with continuous
data on flow of funds between 1971 and 1989. They find that pecking order theory has much
greater time-series explanatory power than a static tradeoff model. They conclude that pecking
order is an excellent first-order descriptor of corporate financing behavior. Clearly, if companies
have well-defined optimal debt ratios, managers are not much interested in getting there. One
criticism of the Shyam-Sunder and Myers (1999) study is that the inferences are based on a rather
small sample.
        Fama and French (2002) present a comprehensive analysis of the complementary and
contrasting implications of the tradeoff and pecking order theories for both dividend payout and
leverage ratios. They identify profitability and investments and the interaction thereof as the key
determinants of financing and dividend decisions. Consistent with both trade off and dynamic
pecking order theories, they find firms with more investments are less levered. Next, their
finding that more profitable firms have less leverage supports the pecking order, and contradicts
the trade off story. Further support for the pecking order theory draws from the evidence that for
dividend paying firms, short-term variation in investment and earnings is mostly absorbed by
debt. Finally, the authors report that the least-levered and non-dividend paying firms (typically



                                                                                                     7
small, growth firms) make the largest net new issues of equity which is contrary to the pecking
order theory. Among other authors to report evidence inconsistent with pecking order theory are
Helwege and Liang (1996) and Frank and Goyal (2002). Using a panel of IPO firms, Helwege
and Liang (1996) find no relationship between the decision to raise external funds and the
shortfall of internally generated funds. Studying the financial activities of US firms from 1971 to
1988, Frank and Goyal (2002) conclude that new equity issues track the financing deficit more
closely than debt issues, a clear contradiction of the pecking order model.


C.      Market Timing Theory


        Market Timing Theory suggests that firms tend to issue stock when the market condition
is favorable, and issue debt when the stock market is under the cloud. Graham and Harvey
(2001) report that most CFOs agree that prior stock price movement and perception of under- or
over-valuation of firms’ stock play important roles in their decision to raise external funds.
Assuming that the ratio of market value to book value reflects investment opportunities, the
market timing theory [Baker and Wurgler (2002)] asserts a negative relation between market
value to book value ratio and the firm’s leverage ratio. This is contradictory to the simple form of
the pecking order theory, but consistent with the more dynamic form. Baker and Wurgler (2002)
demonstrate that leverage is negatively related to ‘external finance weighted-average’ market-to-
book ratio which implies that past market valuation has a significant and persistently negative
impact on firm’s leverage ratio. Their data further reveal that most of the financing is done by
issuing equity, not through retained earnings. The authors reject the trade off and pecking order
models and interpret the result as supportive of the notion that current leverage ratio is a
cumulative outcome of firm’s previous attempts to time the market.
        In summary, while the three theories have several overlapping implications, they also
make some predictions that can be useful to infer which one best fits observed capital structure
choices. We highlight the aspects of each theory that is unique. The trade off theory predicts a
target capital structure that firms regress to in the long run, implying that any relation between
capital structure and profitability or investments is transient. Neither the pecking order theory nor
the market timing theory identifies an optimum capital structure. For dividend-paying (non
dividend-paying) firms, the pecking order theory predicts a long run positive (negative) relation
between market to book value ratio and leverage ratio. The market timing theory leads to a long
run positive relation between market to book value ratio and leverage ratio for all classes of firms;




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the difference between the two is that under pecking order, funds are drawn from retained
earnings while for market timing, equity sales is the source for capital.


III.    REIT Regulatory Environment and Capital Structure


        In this section, we explore the implications of the various theories of capital structure
from the perspective of REIT regulatory environment, and develop the hypotheses. In addition,
we provide a review of the extant evidence on capital structure of REITs.


A.      Theoretical considerations


        REITs are not required to pay corporate taxes if they distribute 95% of taxable income as
dividends. This nullifies two significant benefits of debt financing. One, the tax deductibility of
interest payments and the tax shield is non-existent. Second, since most of the earnings is
distributed, debt servicing has only limited impact on agency cost of free cash flow. Accordingly,
REITs should have one hundred percent equity under the trade off theory. Costs of financial
distress further reinforce the preference for equity. The only effect that induces less than all
equity capital is that asymmetric information between shareholders and managers causes
valuation discounts. In the aggregate, if REITs have an optimum capital structure, it includes
relatively low level of debt.
        The main motivation to prefer debt over equity issues is that managers may use
privileged information to sell overvalued equity and shareholders are aware of it. So, an equity
issue is always discounted by the market. Greater the information asymmetry, higher is the
discount. Information asymmetry is particularly severe in REITs because the transparency of the
underlying assets is less than perfect. For example, analysis of REIT assets may require special
skills and knowledge about general and local economic trends, conditions of comparable
properties, and complex financing arrangements. In addition, shareholders may find it difficult to
determine the fair market values of real estate transactions because they often include
heterogeneous, and illiquid assets.
        Restrictions on REIT’s income sources and investment options may further exacerbate
the information asymmetry. The restrictions that REITs derive their income largely from real
estate activities, and that acquisitions and combinations be restricted to the real estate sector,
allow managers but limited opportunity to acquire inter industry skills, makes them less
employable, and induces them to avoid hostile takeovers [Campbell, Ghosh, and Sirmans]. The



                                                                                                      9
requirement that no single investor owns more than 10 percent of REIT shares deters blockholder
formation. In conjunction, these regulations make managers less vulnerable to the discipline of
the takeover market, and render the board weak. Weak monitoring allows opportunistic
managers to reveal less information. Under this scenario, REITs would be expected to avoid
equity issues and prefer funding investment from retained earnings first, then sell debt if more
capital is needed. A more complex form of pecking order, Myers (1984) notes, states that firms
with generous reserves of cash may avoid issuing debt to preserve debt capacity for future capital
needs, implying a negative long-term relation between leverage and market to book value ratio.
REITs, however, are not expected to have big accumulation of cash and retained capital because
of the payout requirement, which implies that they have to resort to debt financing more often.
Thus, the pecking order theory predicts a long term positive relation between leverage and market
to book ratio.
        Why would REITs issue equity despite the potential for high adverse selection costs?
One reason, Baker and Wurgler (2003) assert, is that adverse selection costs vary over time and
across firms, and managers take advantage of these opportunities to favorably time equity issues.
Opportunities for timing equity sales also arise as irrational investors periodically bid up share
prices to abnormally high levels. Because of the reasons narrated above, the opportunities of low
adverse selection costs may be relatively infrequent for REITs. Under this premise, the market
timing theory prediction of a long-term negative (positive) relation between market to book value
ratio and leverage (equity issues) is questionable for REITs.
        The theories and hypotheses are summarized in table 1. Trade off theory predicts a low
long term target debt ratio. The simple pecking order theory implies a positive relation between
debt ratio and market value to book value ratio. The complex pecking order theory which
implies a negative relation between market to book ratio and leverage for cash rich firms may not
hold for REITs. The market timing theory predicts a negative relation between market value to
book value ratio and leverage and requires opportunities when adverse selection costs are low, a
less likely event for REITs.


B.      Empirical Evidence


        The first attempt to analyze capital structure of REITs from the perspective of valuation
was made by Howe and Shilling (1988) who state that, under the trade off theory, as a non-tax-
paying enterprise, the tax gain to corporate borrowing is strictly negative for REITs, such that a
negative reaction to debt issues is predicted. A negative reaction is consistent also with the



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pecking order implication that issuing a security constitutes a negative signal that it is overvalued,
and the implied-cash-flow change hypothesis [Smith (1986)] which states that unexpected
security offerings suggest that operating cash flows are lower than expected. A positive reaction
to debt sales follows only from Ross’s (1977) assertion that debt issues convey the favorable
information that future earnings will be sufficiently large to support the mandatory interest
payments. Extant literature [Mikkelson and Partch (1986), and Eckbo (1986)] documents non-
positive to significantly negative reaction to debt offerings. Contrary to these studies, Howe and
Shilling (1988) find a significant positive reaction, which they interpret as weak support for
Ross’s signaling hypothesis.
        In an important and comprehensive piece, Brown and Riddiough (2003) study the public
offerings by equity REITs between September 1993 and March 1998, and identify numerous
patterns in the issuance behavior. While the scope of the research seems limited to identifying
some stylized facts about REIT capital structure, certain results have bearing on our analyses. A
significant finding is that maturity of public REIT debt is positively related to offer spread. The
authors point out that if credit market participants assess that REITs issue debt when they are
aggressively leveraged, and if they anticipate that REIT balance sheets will strengthen in the
future, then credit spreads should decline with maturity. On the other hand, if REITs issue public
debt at long-term target leverage ratios, then credit spreads are predicted to increase with
maturity. The evidence therefore suggests the existence of a long-term target debt ratio.
        Two, the authors report that majority of the firms are clustered just above the investment-
grade rating, and REITs that issue public debt are debt capital constrained. While this result also
suggests a target long-run debt ratio, an alternative explanation – consistent with pecking order
theory -- is that as long as REITs can attain minimum investment-grade credit rating, they prefer
to issue debt instead of equity to boost their credit ratings. Further, a significant number of
REITs that issue equity are highly leveraged and remain so subsequently. Apparently, firms issue
equity only when bankruptcy threat looms large, and even at this juncture, they raise just enough
equity capital to mitigate the funding pressure. Finally, REITs with higher total assets and
revenues are more likely to issue debt, another indication that when bankruptcy risk is low,
managers choose debt financing, just as pecking order prescribes. Also in conformity with the
pecking order model, REITs largely fund investment with bank lines of credit and other sources
of private debt. When these sources are exhausted, REITs access the public capital market and
use the issue proceeds to pay down credit lines in order to prepare for the next round of financing.
        Overall, Brown and Riddiough’s (2003) data suggest that despite no obvious tax
advantage, the standard deadweight costs of financial distress, and the pecking order and free



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cash flow rationales being muted by the dividend payout requirements2, REITs prefer issuing debt
and choose equity only as a last recourse. Howe and Shilling’s (1988) analysis demonstrates that
the market approves of this choice. While this is powerful evidence, it is based on static analysis.
To our knowledge, the evolution of capital structure over time has not been explored for REITs.
Our paper fills the gap.


IV.       Data and Summary Statistics


          Our study includes REITs that went IPO during 1991 to 2003 and for which all
accounting and firm specific information required for analyses from 1991 to 2003 are available in
the SNL database. We collect each firm’s financial information, including total debt, total equity,
total assets, total revenue, net income, depreciation, dividend amount, total investment in real
estate, stock price, and the total number of shares outstanding. We also identify the IPO date for
each firm during 1991 to 2003. Table 2 shows the number of REITs in SNL database that went
IPO between 1991-2003, and number of REITs in the final sample by IPO year and calendar year.
Most of REITs have accounting and financing information one year prior to the year of interest,
and hence are included in the analysis to investigate the temporary impact of market-to-book on
leverage ratio. However, missing values reduce the sample size when we test the long-term
relationship between market-to-book and leverage ratios. This limits the scope and interpretation
of our results somewhat.
          As shown in panel A of table 2, the number of REITs in the sample is only 4 in 1992.
The IPO activity picks up between 1994 and 1996 when the sample size jumps to 83 and then
stabilizes at 108 in 2003. That most firms survived during the entire period under study is
apparent in the low attrition reported in panel B. By the tenth year after IPO, as many as 30 of
the original 33 REITs remained in the sample. However, as evident in column 2, availability of
data is very limited for young IPO firms during the early years of our study. For example, only
68 of the eligible 107 firms have data in the first year after IPO. The proportion is much higher
as the firms mature.
          Leverage is measured as the ratio of book value of debt to book value of assets. As
Myers (1977) points out, market values incorporate the value of the call option on firm’s future
‘growth opportunities’. Debt issued against these values can distort future real investment
decisions. As a result, in practice, managers have a good reason to calculate debt ratios using


2
  Free cash flow rationale of debt financing states that mandatory interest payment on debt mitigates the agency cost of
free cash flow. This is muted for REITs by the regulatory requirement to payout 95% of taxable income as dividends.


                                                                                                                     12
book values. Additionally, we investigate the impact of investment opportunities on leverage
ratios. Titman and Wessels (1988) and Fama and French (2002) suggest that a negative
relationship between market leverage and investment opportunities may simply be a
manifestation of better investment producing higher market values, rather than the workings of
trade-off and pecking order models.
        The definition and measurement of key variables follows Baker and Wurgler (2002).
Book debt is total assets minus book equity. Book equity is defined as total assets less total
liabilities and preferred stock plus deferred taxes and convertible debt. Book leverage is
calculated as the ratio of book debt to total assets (D/A). Market leverage is book debt divided by
total assets minus book equity plus market equity. Market equity is the product of number of
shares outstanding and the stock price. Net equity issues (e/A) is defined as the change in book
equity minus the change in retained earnings divided by assets. Newly retained earnings
(∆RE/A) is the ratio of net income minus dividend to total assets. We calculate the net debt
issued (d/A) as the residual change in assets divided by total assets. Market-to-book value ratio
(M/B) is defined as total assets minus book equity plus market equity divided by total assets.
        In table 3, we report the summary statistics of REITs leverage ratios and their financing
by IPO year in panel A and by calendar year in panel B. Three patterns are worth noting. First,
REITs have relatively high book leverage compared to non-REIT firms in the compustat data
base studied by Baker and Wurgler (2002). During 1991 to 2003, REITs maintain a debt ratio of
above 50 percent. More recently, the book debt ratio is well above 60 percent. In contrast, non-
REIT firms from 1974 to 1999 have an average debt ratio below 50 percent. Analyses over
calendar years reveal the same pattern.
        Higher leverage ratio for REITs is consistent with the pecking order theory, but contrary
to tradeoff and market timing models. Tradeoff theory predicts lower book leverage for REITs
due to the tax exempt status and lower free cash flow problem. The business nature of REITs
makes it harder for their shareholders to discover the market values of investment transactions,
which usually involves a wide range of heterogeneous, illiquid assets. According to the pecking
order model, firms with high asymmetric information tend to resort to debt when they need
external funds, and are more likely to have high leverage ratios. Market timing certainly provides
no rationale for this phenomenon. If REITs behave like other firms in choosing the source of
external capital, and raise equity under favorable market conditions and debt under unfavorable
market conditions, it is hard to reconcile why REITs, on average, have higher leverage ratios
relative to other types of firms.




                                                                                                   13
Second, we observe an increasing trend in debt ratio as the maturity of REIT firm
increases. This trend is consistent with table 2 in Baker and Wurgler (2002). The average debt
ratio is 52 percent one year after IPO and steadily grows to 66 percent ten years later. If firms
have a target capital structure in mind, it is difficult to reconcile why debt ratio is growing
continuously over the years. The average debt ratio also increases over the calendar years. This
trend can be explained only as an age effect, not a survival effect. Most REITs in 2003 have a
trading history of at least 4 to 5 years. This pattern contradicts the reversion to target capital
structure over time prescribed by the trade off theory.
        Finally, REITs issue more debt than equity in nine out of ten years after IPO (seven out
of ten years based on calendar year). Although the percentage of net debt issued is decreasing
over the years, it is the driving force in the annual change in total assets. Consistent with the
prediction of pecking order theory, this result suggests that REIT managers turn to debt financing
first, before they consider equity financing. On the other hand, both tradeoff theory and market
timing theories predict firms depend on debt financing in some years and on equity financing in
other years depending on leverage ratio and cost of adverse selection cost.
        In table 4, we report the correlation between various variables. Most interesting is the
persistently positive relation between book leverage ratio and market-to-book ratio over the past
ten years. The 9-year back market-to-book ratio is still positively associated with the current
book leverage ratio. The univariate analysis thus demonstrates a persistent and positive long-term
impact of market-to-book on leverage ratio, which constitutes strong evidence against trade off
and market timing theories, and strong support for the pecking order story.


V.      Models and Empirical Results


        Implications of trade off, pecking order, and market timing theories are usually expressed
in terms of how leverage ratio varies with profitability and investment opportunities. We use
market-to-book value ratio as a proxy for investment opportunities. Brown and Riddiough’s
(2003) finding that the market is more sympathetic to financing for investment purposes than
adjustments in capital structure provides some justification for the use of M/B ratio as a
determinant of debt ratio. Under trade off theory, bankruptcy costs are lower, and leverage higher
for more profitable firms. To minimize agency cost of free cash flow, profitable firms use higher
leverage to disgorge more of firm’s excess cash. Conversely, firms with more investment
opportunities have less free cash flow and can have low leverage ratio. Pecking order theory
asserts that to avoid sale of discounted equity, firms fund investment with retained earnings first,



                                                                                                     14
then debt, and finally equity. It follows that if profitability and investments are persistent,
leverage is lower for profitable firms, and higher for firms with more investment opportunities.
Dividend payment reinforces the relationship. Market timing theory predicts that managers time
equity issues when equity is overvalued. If investment opportunities are persistent, a long-term
negative relation between market to book ratio and leverage ratio is predicted.


A.      The relationship between market-to-book and leverage ratios


        In this section, we investigate the determinants of annual changes in leverage. Following
Baker and Wurgler (2002) and Rajan and Zingales (1995), we include three variables that are
correlated with leverage.


        ⎛D⎞ ⎛D⎞          ⎛M ⎞      ⎛ REinvestment ⎞     ⎛ EBITDA ⎞
        ⎜ ⎟ − ⎜ ⎟ = a + b⎜ ⎟ + c⎜                 ⎟ + d⎜         ⎟
        ⎝ A ⎠t ⎝ A ⎠t −1 ⎝ B ⎠t −1 ⎝      A       ⎠t −1 ⎝    A   ⎠t −1

                                                   ⎛D⎞
                            + e log( S ) t − 1 + f ⎜ ⎟ + u t                                  (1)
                                                   ⎝ A ⎠ t −1


The sign of coefficient b is the main focus of this equation. Both tradeoff and market timing
theory predict a negative sign, while pecking order suggests the opposite. A more complicated
version of pecking order asserts that firms with larger expected dividends may keep current
leverage low to preserve debt capacity so as to avoid funding future investments with new risky
securities [Myers (1984)]. For REITs, however, such a strategy may not be feasible because of
the 95% payout requirement.
        We use percentage of real estate investment as proxy for asset tangibility in equation (1).
Tangible assets may be used as collateral and hence may be associated with higher leverage.
However, REITs are expected to have most of the assets as tangible assets, such that much
variability is not expected in the data. Hence, we do not expect a relationship between tangible
assets and leverage ratios. Profitability is associated with the availability of internal cash flows,
which implies lower leverage ratio under the pecking order theory. However, REITs are required
to pay out 95 percent of the earnings as dividends. Hence, there is limited free cash flow and a
significant relationship between profitability and leverage may not emerge. The natural
logarithm of total revenue is used as a proxy for firm size. As large firms are less likely to suffer
financial distress, they might be associated with high leverage if the financial distress costs are
considered to be of first-order importance to the firms (as tradeoff theory suggests). Fama and


                                                                                                      15
French (2002) argue that larger firms may have less volatile earnings which will also induce a
higher leverage ratio. Therefore, in accordance with trade off theory, we expect the coefficient of
firm size to have a positive sign. Finally, we add the lagged leverage in our model, as Baker and
Wurgler (2002) suggest, to control for the fact that debt ratio is bounded from 0 to 1. It is
expected to have a negative sign3.
          Panel A of table 5 reports the regression results from equation (1). We run this model for
each year after IPO (IPO regressions). This allows us to study the changes (if any) in capital
structure as the firm matures. We also construct the full 1991 to 2003 SNL sample for
comparison. The regression estimates for the sample with all firms contains multiple
observations on the same firm from different calendar year. First, the negative and significant
coefficient of real estate investment and non-significance of the coefficient of firm size do not
support the implications of the tradeoff theory. The evidence on profitability is mixed. Second,
the market-to-book ratio is significant only in three of the ten IPO years. When it is significant,
the sign is positive. The market-to-book is positive and significant in the all firms regression
which is contrary to market timing and the trade off theory, but consistent with the pecking order
story. It is also interesting to note that the non-negative coefficient for M/B is not consistent with
the Myers (1984) dynamic form of pecking order model which states that in anticipation of
funding requirements for higher investments in the future, firms may preserve debt capacity by
using retained earnings for current needs. While regular dividend paying firms with stable cash
flow are most capable of following this strategy, REITs are at a disadvantage because of high
payout requirements. In essence, the positive sign for M/B ratio allows us to unequivocally reject
the trade off, market timing and the dynamic form of pecking order theory. The evidence,
however, can be interpreted only as preliminary and weak support for the simple pecking order
theory. Further confirmation for the model must await analysis of the different funding sources.


B.        Components of Leverage change


          Following Baker and Wurgler (2002), we further decompose the change in leverage into
equity issues, retained earnings, and the residual change in leverage, which depends on the total
growth in assets from the combination of equity issues, debt issues, and newly retained earnings.




3
  This coefficient is negative in 7 of 10 IPO years, as well as in the All Firms regression. When it is positive, it is never
significant in any level.




                                                                                                                          16
⎛D⎞ ⎛D⎞          ⎛e     ⎞ ⎛ ∆REt   ⎞ ⎡ ⎛1           1 ⎞⎤
        ⎜ ⎟ − ⎜ ⎟ = −⎜ t ⎜A     ⎟−⎜
                                ⎟ ⎜ A      ⎟ − ⎢ Et −1 ⎜ −
                                           ⎟           ⎜ A A ⎟⎥  ⎟
                                                                                              (2)
        ⎝ A ⎠t ⎝ A ⎠t −1 ⎝ t    ⎠ ⎝ t      ⎠ ⎣ ⎝ t          t −1 ⎠ ⎦




This decomposition allows us to identify more specifically the driving force behind the leverage
change. We use each component as our dependent variable and run the same regressions for each
IPO year, as well as for all firms from 1991 to 2003. The results are presented in panels B, C and
D of table 5. As Braker and Wurgler (2002) point out, the coefficients in panel A should equal
the summation of the corresponding coefficients from panels B, C and D.
        The results in panel B indicate that market-to-book ratio has impact -- through net equity
issues -- on changes in leverage as predicted by market timing. In five out of ten IPO regressions
as well as in the regression for all firms, we find net equity issues help to reduce the leverage ratio
when the market valuations of the firms are high. However, these effects are not significant in
the other half of the IPO regressions. Also, consistent with our expectation, panel C shows only
weakly significant impact of internally generated funds on REITs’ leverage ratio. In contrast, we
find significant impact of market-to-book on changes in leverage through asset growth (panel D).
In nine out of ten IPO regressions as well as the all firms regression, the coefficients of market-to-
book are significant at the conventional levels. These coefficients are larger in terms of absolute
value compared to those in panel B. In the all firms regression, the coefficient for market-to-book
is 12.88 in panel D compared to 8.66 in panel B. Hence, the dominant factor for change in
leverage ratio is the growth of total assets. To put it in perspective simply, the growth in total
assets is mainly funded by net debt issues. Comparing panels B and D, we conclude that debt
funding is the major source for external financing for REIT firms.
        No other coefficient in the other columns of panels B, C and D is significant. As a result,
we believe that market-to-book does have at least a temporary impact on leverage ratio. Firms
with higher growth opportunities are more likely to fund their investment through external debt
issuance. This statistically and economically significant impact is predicted by pecking order
theory, but not by tradeoff or market timing models.


C.      Long-term impact of market-to-book


        Next, we investigate whether the impact of market-to-book on leverage ratio is persistent
over time as predicted by pecking order and market timing or just temporary as suggested by
tradeoff theory. We use the three variables that were reported to be correlated with leverage ratio
by Rajan and Zingales (1995) as control variables.


                                                                                                     17
⎛D⎞        ⎛M ⎞               ⎛M ⎞    ⎛ REinvestment ⎞
          ⎜ ⎟ = a + b⎜ ⎟             + c⎜ ⎟ + d ⎜              ⎟
          ⎝ A ⎠t     ⎝ B ⎠ efwa ,t −1 ⎝ B ⎠t −1 ⎝      A       ⎠t −1

                              ⎛ EBITDA ⎞
                           + e⎜        ⎟ + f log( S ) t −1 + u t                             (3)
                              ⎝    A   ⎠ t −1


       ⎛M ⎞             t −1
                             e + ds ⎛ M ⎞
where ⎜    ⎟          = ∑ t −1s     .⎜ ⎟                                                     (4)
       ⎝ B ⎠efwa ,t −1 s = 0 e + d ⎝ B ⎠ s
                             ∑r r
                           r =0




The focus of this analysis is the ‘external finance weighted-average’ market-to-book ratio (eqn. 4)
suggested by Baker and Wurgler (2002). We use this weighted average to capture the long term
effects of market-to-book on the leverage ratio. This variable takes high values for firms that raise
external finance when the market-to-book ratio is high and vice-versa. If firms tend to raise
equity when the market-to-book is high reflecting greater investment opportunities, as predicted
by the market timing story, then we expect a negative relationship between this variable and the
leverage ratio. If firms tend to raise debt when the market-to-book is high, as predicted by
pecking order theory, then we expect a positive coefficient for this variable. If the market-to-
book has only temporary impact on leverage ratio as suggested by tradeoff theory, then we should
not find the coefficient of this variable to be significant. Also, we follow Baker and Wurgler
(2002) and allow the minimum weight to be zero in order to ensure the weights are increasing in
the total amount of external finance raised in each period. The lagged value of market-to-book is
included to control for the current cross-sectional variation in the level of market-to-book. What
is left for the weighted market-to-book ratio is the residual influence of past, within-firm variation
in market-to-book.
          In panel A of table 6, we use only the traditional control variables from Rajan and
Zingales (1995). We find that current cross sectional market-to-book value has a positive impact
on the leverage ratio in three of IPO regressions and the all firms regression. This result is
consistent with those reported in previous tables. We also find that other control variables do not
have a significant relationship with leverage ratios in most of our IPO regressions as well as the
regression including all firms. As discussed previously, this finding is consistent with the unique
regulatory characteristics of the REITs.
          In panel B, we add the weighted average market-to-book ratio in our models to test the
long-term relationship between market-to-book and the leverage ratio. We do not include this


                                                                                                   18
weighted average for IPO+1 and IPO+2 regressions due to the high correlation between this
variable and the lag market-to-book ratios. We find that weighted average market-to-book is the
most significant variable in determining the cross sectional variation in leverage ratio of REITs.
The coefficient of this variable is positive and highly significant in seven out eight IPO
regressions and also in the all firms regression, indicating REITs with historically higher market-
to-book ratios tend to have persistently higher leverage ratios. The impact of market-to-book is
not temporary and capital structure is not mean reverting as suggested by tradeoff theory. REIT
managers do not balance their capital structure over a 10-year period. In summary, the market-to-
book ratio has a positive and long-term impact on REIT leverage ratios. Pecking Order Theory
does a better job predicting this relationship compared to the other two capital structure theories.


VI.     Synthesis and Discussion


        The main findings may be summarized as follows:
        1.          The significantly negative coefficient for tangible assets and the non-
                    significance of size and profitability in the contemporaneous regression
                    contradicts the trade off theory. The persistently significant relation between
                    market to book value ratio and leverage in the long-term regression is
                    inconsistent with the trade off theory as well.

        2.          Pecking order theory receives weak support from the contemporaneous
                    regression in the positive relation between leverage and market to book ratio.
                    The strongest support for the pecking order story draws from significant
                    relation between market to book ratio and change in leverage through asset
                    growth. The persistent impact of market to book value ratio in the long term
                    regression also shows REITs follow pecking order in financing decisions.

        3.          In the contemporaneous model, the negative coefficient for market to book
                    ratio contradicts the market timing theory. The evidence of persistently
                    positive impact of weighted market to book in the long term regression
                    strengthens the conclusion.



VII.    Conclusion


        The main contribution of this paper is to explore if and how unique regulatory provisions
of REITs influence their capital structure decisions. Trade off theory predicts that capital
structure represents a trade off between costs and benefits of debt financing; pecking order theory
states that under asymmetric information, managers choose to fund investment with retained



                                                                                                  19
earnings first, then debt, and lastly equity; market timing theory asserts that managers issue equity
whenever conditions are favorable. In the long run, trade off theory predicts no relationship
between leverage ratio and market to book ratio, pecking order suggests a persistent positive
relation, and market timing theory a persistent negative relation between these variables.
        The tax-exempt status of REITs eliminates the tax shield advantage of debt financing.
The requirement that ninety five percent of taxable earnings be paid out as dividends mitigates
the agency cost of free cash flow. With no special benefit to debt financing, bankruptcy costs
imply one hundred percent equity financing under trade off theory. High payout has an
additional effect -- it forces REITs to raise investment capital externally where valuation is
uncertain due to information asymmetry between securityholders and managers. REIT
shareholders are especially vulnerable because real estate assets tend to be illiquid and less
transparent. Regulatory restrictions on sources of income and choices of assets that REITs are
allowed to invest in further exacerbate the information asymmetry. To elaborate, regulation
limiting managers’ investment options narrows their experience to sector specific assets. To
prevent job loss, these entrenched managers may collude to forestall hostile takeover threats, and
create an environment where discipline and monitoring by the market corporate control is
weakened. Finally, regulatory restriction on ownership size makes takeovers difficult and acts as
a disincentive to institutional investors and blockholders. Thus protected, REIT managers are
under little pressure to reveal full information. If shareholders recognize this agency problem to
be persistent, new share issues would be deeply discounted, and opportunities to sell equity
scarce. Under this scenario, debt financing is the preferred choice so that the pecking order
theory rather than the market timing theory provides a more apt description of expected
managerial behavior in REITs.
        We analyze REITs’ financing choice over a number of years following their IPO. The
objective is to explore how REIT capital structure evolves in response to needs for investment
capital. The data reveal no indication of regression to a long term optimum capital structure, as
trade off theory would suggest. Rather, REITs with historically high market-to-book ratio tend to
have high leverage ratio. In essence, REITs with high growth opportunity and high market
valuation raise most of their needed funds through debt issuance. This finding is contrary to the
financing decisions of non-regulated firms. We attribute it to the special regulatory environment
of REITs where, despite no apparent benefits to debt financing, management prefers issuing debt
to equity to raise funds because the adverse selection costs due to information asymmetry exceeds
the potential costs of financial distress. This analysis has significant implications for the
literature on corporate capital structure decisions.



                                                                                                  20
21
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                                                                                              22
Table 1: Theories of capital structure and REIT regulatory environment

          Theory                            Impact Variables                                  Debt and M/B ratio                                            Real Estate Regulation
Trade-off: A long-term             Tax-deductibility of interest payments            Firms with high M/B ratio (high growth and           REITs are exempt from corporate taxes if 95% of current earnings are
optimum capital structure exists   encourages high debt levels.                      investment) have low free cash flow and tend to      paid out as dividends. High payout reduces free cash flow. Loss of tax-
where benefits of debt                                                               be risky. To avoid financial crisis in a downturn,   deductibility and low free cash flow imply low debt ratios.
financing are traded off against   Bankruptcy costs force low debt levels.           high M/B firms choose low debt ratios.
the costs                                                                                                                                 Implication: Trade-off theory predicts low debt ratio for all REITs,
                                   Mandatory interest payments on debt reduce        To maintain capital structure at the long-term       regardless of M/B ratios. The long term adjustment to optimum capital
                                   free cash flow, and mitigate agency costs; but,   optimum level, firms adjust capital structure to     structure holds.
                                   high debt levels induce shareholder value-        changes in M/B ratio. So, no long-term
                                   maximizing managers to reject profitable          relationship exists between M/B and capital
                                   investments to prevent transfer of wealth to      structure.
                                   debtholders.
Pecking Order: Managers            Information asymmetry between shareholders        High M/B firms require investment capital. To        Real estate assets are difficult to value which implies REITs would
always prefer issuing debt to      and managers implies preference for debt over     avoid issuing discounted equity, they issue debt.    prefer to finance investment through debt issues, or retained earnings.
avoid the potential valuation      equity.                                           This results in high debt ratios.
discount associated with equity                                                                                                           The 95% payout requirement results in low free cash flow in REITs. In
issues. This theory predicts a                                                       Alternatively, high M/B firms choose low debt        conjunction with discount on equity issues due to information
positive relation between M/B                                                        ratios to create slack such that they can avoid      asymmetry and adverse selection, low free cash flow implies REITs
ratio and debt ratio, but, no                                                        issuing equity if and when they need funds in the    must sell debt to raise funds, pushing debt ratios higher.
long-term optimum capital                                                            future. This strategy requires access to high free
structure.                                                                           cash flow and retained earnings.                     Implication: Low free cash flow and lack of transparency of real estate
                                                                                                                                          assets and investments imply high debt ratios, the effect being stronger
                                                                                                                                          for high M/B REITs.
Market Timing: Managers            Information symmetry between shareholders         If high M/B ratio implies low adverse selection      REITs must earn 75% of their earnings from real estate activities.
issue equity when cost of          and managers induces adverse selection costs      cost, then managers can take advantage of high       Investment options for REITs are also restricted mainly to sector
equity capital is low. Under       in equity issues. These costs vary across time    M/B ratio to time equity issues.                     specific assets. Finally, no single entity can own more than 50% stake.
this theory, a negative relation   and across firms.
between M/B and debt ratio is                                                        Extreme values of M/B indicate extreme investor      Restricting operations and acquisitions to the same sector denies
predicted, but no optimum          Extremely high expectations by irrational         expectations. Managers exploit extreme               managers the opportunity to acquire inter industry experience which
capital structure exists.          investors periodically cause equity to be         valuations by issuing equity when M/B ratios are     shrinks their job market. This induces managers to collude against
                                   mispriced rendering cost of equity abnormally     high.                                                hostile takeovers. Ownership restriction deters formation of
                                   low.                                                                                                   blockholders, which weakens monitoring by board and allows managers
                                                                                                                                          to withhold or conceal material information.

                                                                                                                                          Implication: Opportunities to time equity sales are relatively scarce.




                                                                                                                                                                                                      23
Table 2 Missing Values and Sample Selection

 We show the number of REIT firms that are included in our study in this table. Firms are dropped out of
our sample due to missing accounting and financing information during the period of our study. In second
 column reports the number of firms in SNL database that went IPO during 1991 to 2003. The number of
 firms that are included in our models that are testing the temporary impact of market-to-book on leverage
   ratio is listed in third column. We report the number of firms that are included in testing the long-term
                    relationship between market-to-book and leverage ratio in fourth column.

                Number of firms in SNL                                         Number of firms with information
                                             Number of firms with accounting
  Year       database that went IPO during                                     available to calculate the weighted
                                              information available at (t-1)
                       1991-2003                                                     average of MTB ratio
                                             Panel A: Calendar Year
  1992                    4                                 2                                  0
  1993                    8                                 7                                  3
  1994                    33                               19                                  7
  1995                    68                               38                                  22
  1996                    83                               41                                  37
  1997                    85                               54                                  41
  1998                    90                               79                                  41
  1999                    99                               91                                  46
  2000                   103                               95                                  54
  2001                   104                               96                                  54
  2002                   106                               95                                  53
  2003                   108                               98                                  52
                                               Panel B: IPO Year
  IPO+1                  107                               68                                  68
  IPO+2                  102                               68                                  68
  IPO+3                  101                               80                                  67
  IPO+4                  100                               88                                  64
  IPO+5                   93                               89                                  61
  IPO+6                   87                               82                                  52
  IPO+7                   74                               71                                  39
  IPO+8                   66                               63                                  34
  IPO+9                   61                               57                                  32
 IPO+10                   30                               29                                  17




                                                                                                               24
Table 3: Summary Statistics of Capital structure
In this table, we report the summary statistics on current leverage ratio and the changes in current leverage
ratio. Book leverage is calculated as book debt to total assets. Market leverage is book debt divided by the
result of total assets minus book equity plus market equity. Market equity is the product of number of share
outstanding and the stock price. Net equity issues (e/At) is defined as the change in book equity minus the
change in retaining earnings divided by assets. Newly retained earnings (∆RE/At) is the ratio of the result
of net income minus dividend amount and total assets. We calculate the new debt issues (d/At) as the
residual change in assets divided by assets.


                  Book Leverage %    Market Leverage      d/At %              e/At %           ∆RE / At %
                                     %
Year     N        Mean      S.D.     Mean      S.D.       Mean        S.D.    Mean     S.D.    Mean     S.D.
                                               Panel A: IPO Year
IPO+1    68       51.63     18.66    46.54     18.60      16.15       17.24   11.45    16.53   -1.08    2.68
IPO+2    68       55.18     18.51    50.39     19.57      14.39       14.46   8.87     13.73   -1.12    3.38
IPO+3    80       56.28     17.00    50.10     18.29      13.60       12.35   8.56     11.25   -0.72    2.75
IPO+4    88       59.22     18.80    52.79     17.55      12.69       16.57   5.93     16.86   -0.88    2.91
IPO+5    89       62.37     17.42    56.54     16.53      9.14        14.79   4.45     10.39   -0.60    4.48
IPO+6    82       65.34     17.13    59.91     16.81      5.28        15.13   0.87     7.62    0.17     3.43
IPO+7    71       65.72     18.90    60.15     17.40      3.30        9.97    1.45     12.26   -0.90    2.74
IPO+8    63       66.09     16.94    59.86     16.57      0.86        17.56   2.36     11.03   -0.71    2.24
IPO+9    57       66.11     16.80    56.81     16.30      3.00        9.13    1.57     5.19    -0.86    1.79
IPO+10   29       65.58     17.48    53.38     16.23      5.14        12.60   2.24     7.13    -1.40    3.95
                                             Panel B: Calendar Year
1994     19       52.01     26.50    43.60     22.40      13.79       14.43   11.91    18.66   -2.03    1.74
1995     38       50.19     21.14    42.10     18.53      10.06       12.21   10.35    16.11   -1.98    1.68
1996     41       51.50     18.17    40.86     17.80      12.12       11.06   14.16    14.14   -1.22    1.88
1997     54       55.12     17.41    44.49     16.07      18.65       12.85   15.10    13.35   -0.90    1.62
1998     79       59.76     15.90    56.23     14.90      24.43       16.24   9.39     18.36   -0.31    2.15
1999     91       61.87     15.01    61.63     14.23      8.27        11.15   1.58     5.90    0.03     2.94
2000     95       62.49     16.76    60.82     16.63      3.00        11.25   -0.25    5.11    -0.23    4.52
2001     96       64.21     17.25    58.38     16.96      3.50        11.42   0.69     8.06    -0.64    2.66
2002     95       65.44     18.91    58.98     16.86      3.78        10.71   1.08     7.29    -0.85    3.61
2003     98       64.65     18.90    52.27     16.88      2.19        17.70   4.21     12.50   -1.05    3.66




                                                                                                               25
Table 4: Correlation between Leverage and Past Market to Book Ratio

In this table, we present correlations between leverage ratio and past market-to-book ratios. Book leverage
is calculated as book debt to total assets. Market leverage is book debt divided by the result of total assets
minus book equity plus market equity. Market equity is the product of number of share outstanding and the
stock price. Market-to-book is defined as total assets minus book equity plus market equity then divided by
total assets. We include all firms. The numbers in parentheses contain multiple observations on the same
firm from different calendar years for which past values of market-to-book ratio are available in SNL
database.
           Book       Market     MTB        MTB        MTB         MTB        MTB        MTB        MTB       MTB       MTB       MTB
           Leverage   Leverage   t-1        t-2        t-3         t-4        t-5        t-6        t-7       t-8       t-9       t-10
Book       1.00       0.73***    0.23***    0.25***    0.23***     0.26***    0.23***    0.21***    0.18***   0.20**    0.24**    0.26
Leverage   (715)      (713)      (715)      (641)      (567)       (485)      (396)      (308)      (225)     (154)     (93)      (39)
Market                1.00       -0.35***   -0.25***   -0.18 ***   -0.15***   -0.17***   -0.18***   -0.07     -0.03     0.09      0.04
Leverage              (713)      (713)      (639)      (565)       (483)      (394)      (306)      (223)     (152)     (92)      (39)
MTB t-1                          1.00       0.84***    0.66***     0.59***    0.64***    0.58***    0.33***   0.31***   0.33***   0.35**
                                 (715)      (641)      (567)       (485)      (396)      (308)      (225)     (154)     (93)      (39)
MTB t-2                                     1.00       0.81***     0.65***    0.56***    0.60***    0.40***   0.33***   0.33***   0.42***
                                            (641)      (566)       (484)      (395)      (308)      (225)     (154)     (93)      (39)
MTB t-3                                                1.00        0.83***    0.61***    0.45***    0.44***   0.40***   0.32***   0.44***
                                                       (567)       (484)      (395)      (307)      (225)     (154)     (93)      (39)
MTB t-4                                                            1.00       0.81***    0.53***    0.39***   0.52***   0.42***   0.31*
                                                                   (485)      (395)      (307)      (224)     (154)     (93)      (39)
MTB t-5                                                                       1.00       0.74***    0.48***   0.55***   0.59***   0.31*
                                                                              (396)      (307)      (224)     (153)     (93)      (39)
MTB t-6                                                                                  1.00       0.81***   0.68***   0.64***   0.56***
                                                                                         (308)      (225)     (154)     (93)      (39)
MTB t-7                                                                                             1.00      0.79***   0.64***   0.66***
                                                                                                    (225)     (154)     (93)      (39)
MTB t-8                                                                                                       1.00      0.82***   0.75***
                                                                                                              (154)     (93)      (39)
MTB t-9                                                                                                                 1.00      0.84***
                                                                                                                        (93)      (39)
MTB t-                                                                                                                            1.00
10                                                                                                                                (39)




                                                                                                                                      26
Table 5: Determinants of Annual Changes in Leverage and Components
We investigate the impact of market-to-book on temporary change in leverage ratio in table 4. The
dependent variable in Panel A is annual change in book leverage. Besides the market-to-book ratio, we
also add percentage of real estate investment to total assets as proxy for asset tangibility, EBITDA to total
assets as proxy for profitability and logarithm of total revenue as proxy of firm size. These variables are
proven to be connected with leverage ratio in Rajan and Zingales (1995). We run this model for each IPO
year as well as for all firms in SNL database between 1991 and 2003. We further decompose the change in
leverage ratio into equity issues, retained earnings, and the residual change in leverage, which depends on
the total growth in assets from the combination of equity issues, debt issues, and newly retained earnings.
We run the same models for each component and reported the results in Panel B, C and D.

                    (M/B)t-1                (Reinvestment/A)t-1     (EBITDA/A)t-1         Ln (Revenue ) t-1
Year         N      B          t(b)         c          t(c)         D         t(d)        e          t(e)       R-sqr
                                           Panel A: Change in book leverage %
IPO+1        68     -2.65        -0.58      -0.23      -1.46        -0.07     -0.15       -1.60      -1.46      31.02
IPO+2        68     0.61         0.11       -0.18      -1.60        -0.34     -0.48       0.63       0.62       17.61
IPO+3        80     -2.81        -0.78      -0.13      -1.31        0.03      0.07        -0.59      -0.94      25.65
IPO+4        88     14.06        2.40**     -0.34      -2.61**      -0.71     -1.40       0.72       0.68       21.71
IPO+5        89     8.05         2.61**     0.06       0.68         -0.13     -0.36       -0.48      -0.68      13.20
IPO+6        82     6.57         2.56**     -0.13      -1.99**      -0.46     -2.80***    0.00       0.01       18.67
IPO+7        71     2.62         0.85       -0.33      -2.77*** -0.75         -3.16***    -0.57      -1.13      30.88
IPO+8        63     -3.63        -0.93      0.17       1.00         0.58      2.48**      2.43       4.05***    50.70
IPO+9        57     0.68         0.20       -0.15      -0.95        -0.08     -0.25       1.06       1.69*      0.00
IPO+10       29     -1.34        -0.18      0.60       1.73*        -0.19     -0.26       -0.45      -0.27      6.48
All firms    715    2.41         1.85 *     -0.11      -3.07*** -0.13         -1.21       0.07       0.28       14.97
                              Panel B: Change in Book Leverage Due to Net Equity Issues %
IPO+1        68     -10.97       -1.73*     -0.25      -1.17        0.34      0.50        0.58       0.38       1.13
IPO+2        68     -11.15       -1.67*     -0.26      -1.99*       0.21      0.36        2.03       1.67*      12.49
IPO+3        80     -17.30       -3.40***   -0.14      -1.01        1.93      3.60***     -0.26      -0.29      13.43
IPO+4        88     4.42         0.57       -0.29      -1.65        0.28      0.41        0.88       0.62       1.73
IPO+5        89     -1.48        -0.41      -0.23      -2.33**      0.94      2.27**      1.75       2.11**     11.33
IPO+6        82     1.70         0.55       -0.26      -3.42*** -0.16         -0.79       2.19       3.84***    30.97
IPO+7        71     -23.73       -4.23***   -0.45      -2.09**      0.05      0.11        2.04       2.22**     40.21
IPO+8        63     -15.19       -3.19***   -0.01      -0.07        1.45      5.05***     2.97       4.06***    61.88
IPO+9        57     -8.23        -2.28**    -0.26      -1.58        0.11      0.33        0.71       1.05       9.94
IPO+10       29     -3.71        -0.54      -0.05      -0.15        -0.46     -0.70       0.85       0.54       0.00
All firms    715    -8.66        -5.15***   -0.23      -4.80*** 0.54          3.84***     1.88       5.78***    12.77
                           Panel C: Change in Book Leverage Due to Newly Retained Earnings %
IPO+1        68     -1.64        -1.89*     0.06       1.90*        -0.05     -0.55       -0.47      -2.30**    29.70
IPO+2        68     -3.71        -2.43**    -0.03      -0.86        -0.18     -1.34       -0.73      -2.63**    24.67
IPO+3        80     1.51         1.39       0.05       1.58         -0.61     -5.30***    -0.24      -1.26      33.90
IPO+4        88     -0.34        -0.26      -0.07      -2.29**      -0.28     -2.47**     -0.34      -1.46      10.61
IPO+5        89     -2.49        -1.84*     0.08       2.25**       -0.55     -3.52***    -0.98      -3.14***   32.88
IPO+6        82     -1.87        -1.99*     0.10       4.11***      -0.39     -6.49***    -0.37      -2.16**    68.50
IPO+7        71     0.65         0.45       -0.04      -0.66        -0.29     -2.62**     -0.38      -1.63      21.24
IPO+8        63     2.01         1.59       -0.05      -0.91        -0.25     3.29***     -0.19      -0.96      34.84
IPO+9        57     0.39         0.31       0.11       1.81*        -0.19     -1.61       -0.23      -0.96      6.11
IPO+10       29     -0.36        -0.09      -0.12      -0.65        -0.39     -1.05       -0.59      -0.68      0.00
All firms    715    -1.82        -4.64***   0.03       2.80***      -0.25     -7.79***    -0.39      -5.14***   22.90
                              Panel D: Change in Book Leverage Due to Growth in Assets %
IPO+1        68     9.96         2.07**     -0.03      -0.21        -0.36     -0.70       -1.71      -1.50      42.83
IPO+2        68     15.48        2.74***    0.11       1.00         -0.38     -0.76       -0.67      -0.65      31.87
IPO+3        80     12.99        2.89***    -0.03      -0.28        -1.30     -2.73***    -0.09      -0.12      26.84
IPO+4        88     9.97         2.62**     0.01       0.12         -0.72     -2.17**     0.18       0.26       13.39
IPO+5        89     12.02        3.94***    0.21       2.44**       -0.52     -1.49       -1.25      -1.78*     28.76
IPO+6        82     6.74         2.11**     0.04       0.49         0.09      0.43        -1.81      -3.07***   23.19
IPO+7        71     25.70        4.86***    0.16       0.79         -0.51     -1.24       -2.23      -2.57**    42.70
IPO+8        63     9.55         3.35***    0.23       1.89*        -0.62     -3.58***    -0.35      -0.79      28.15
IPO+9        57     8.51         3.24***    0.01       0.07         0.00      0.01        0.58       1.18       18.73
IPO+10       29     2.82         0.57       0.77       3.36***      0.67      1.43        -0.70      -0.64      33.58
All firms    715    12.88        10.01*** 0.08         2.32**       -0.41     -3.86***    -1.42      -5.70***   35.46




                                                                                                                    27
Table 6: Determinants of Leverage

We investigate the relationship between market-to-book and leverage ratio in table 5. Penal A, we follow
Rajan and Zingales (1995) and use percentage of real estate investment, EBITDA to total assets and
logarithm of total revenue as control variables. In panel B, we add the weighted average market-to-book
ratio which is proposed by Baker and Wurgler (2002) to capture the long-term effect of market-to-book on
leverage ratios. We run this model for each IPO year as well as for all firms in SNL database between 1991
and 2003. In Panel B, we do not include the weighted average market-to-book in IPO+1 and IPO+2
regression due to the high correlation between the current market-to-book and weighted average market-to-
book.

                       (M/B)efwa,t-1              (M/B)t-1             (Reinvestment/A)t-1            (EBITDA/A)t-1        Ln (Revenue ) t-1
                                                                                                                                                R-sqr %
  Year      N      b              t(b)     C                 t(c)       D            t(d)             E          t(e)      f            t(f)


                                                    Panel A: Without Weighted Average Market-to-book


 IPO+1      68                           5.54                0.81     -0.38         -1.60         0.06          0.07     0.67           0.42     5.52


 IPO+2      68                           4.83                0.51     -0.17         -0.90         0.47          0.58     2.47           1.46     4.13


 IPO+3      80                           -12.00              -1.50    -0.19         -0.86         1.62          1.96*    1.78           1.30     4.53


 IPO+4      88                           12.77               1.57     -0.39        -2.12 **       0.85          1.27     2.84          1.97 *    13.40


 IPO+5      89                           13.09           2.31**       -0.18         -1.14         1.21          1.92*    0.90           0.69     21.02


 IPO+6      82                           28.00          4.19***       -0.03         -0.15         -0.50         -1.08    0.23           0.17     26.33


 IPO+7      71                           6.82                0.60     -0.24         -0.55         -1.11         -1.27    0.90           0.49     0.00


 IPO+8      63                           28.24          2.71***       -0.67         -1.43         -0.58         -0.87    1.26           0.73     8.30


 IPO+9      57                           18.37               1.59      0.05         0.08          0.97          0.91     1.67           0.76     7.39


 IPO+10     29                           26.36           1.96*         1.06         1.55         -0.19          -0.14    -0.48         -0.15     23.18


All firms   715                          9.58           3.85***       -0.17        -2.45**        0.48         2.31**    2.30         4.85***    10.53


                                                      Panel B: With Weighted Average Market-to-book


 IPO+1      68                           5.54                0.81     -0.38         -1.60         0.06          0.07     0.67           0.42     5.52


 IPO+2      68                           4.83                0.51     -0.17         -0.90         0.47          0.58     2.47           1.46     4.13


 IPO+3      67    11.47        3.99***   -23.67         -2.76***       0.07         0.30          2.38         2.78***   2.37           1.44     23.11

 IPO+4      64    4.16          2.62**   -3.68               -0.43    -0.58        -1.73*         0.59          0.71     3.87         2.06**     29.84


 IPO+5      61    1.29           0.51    3.83                0.36     -0.28         -1.14         1.52          1.76*    1.02           0.64     25.57


 IPO+6      52    12.95        4.24***   -12.48              -1.33    -0.10         -0.47        -0.74          -1.06    -2.80         -1.99*    55.65


 IPO+7      39    36.81        3.75***   -25.70         -2.10**        0.35         0.57         -1.11          -1.25    -2.72         -1.41     25.30


 IPO+8      34    34.28        3.25***   -19.46              -1.27     0.62         0.85         -0.01          -0.01    -0.94         -0.40     17.43

 IPO+9      32    38.88        3.45***   -19.75              -1.42     1.00         1.41          0.04          0.03     -0.14         -0.06     21.30

 IPO+10     17    38.41         2.83**   -9.99               -0.62     1.74        2.56**         -0.40         -0.20    2.81           0.72     37.24


All firms   410   3.90         1.32***   -6.88           -1.89*       -0.20        -2.11**        1.19         4.15***   2.48         3.87***    16.92




                                                                                                                                                   28

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Capital structure feng ghosh sirman

  • 1. On the Capital Structure of Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) Zhilan Feng, Chinmoy Ghosh and C. F. Sirmans* Abstract Much of the literature on capital structure excludes Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) due mainly to the unique regulatory environment of these firms. As such, the issue of how REITs choose among different financing options when they raise external capital is largely unexplored. In this paper, we examine the capital structure of REITs to answer two questions: is there a relationship between market-to-book and leverage ratios? and, does market-to-book have a temporary or a long-term impact on leverage ratios? Our results suggest that REITs with high market-to-book ratios have high leverage ratios, and historical market-to-book has long-term persistent impact on current leverage ratio. We interpret these findings as supportive of pecking order theory. When financing costs of adverse selection exceed costs of financial distress, pecking order is more relevant in explaining the cross-sectional variation in capital structure. Zhilan Feng is at School of Management, the Graduate College of Union University, Chinmoy Ghosh and C. F. Sirmans are at the Center for Real Estate and Urban Economic Studies at the School of Business, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT, USA. All correspondence may be addressed to Zhilan Feng at fengz@union.edu.
  • 2. On the Capital Structure of Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) I. Introduction and Motivation This paper explores how the capital structure of Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) evolves over time. Much of the traditional literature in finance tends to exclude regulated firms because regulation is often designed to address the very same market imperfections that theory focuses on. The first motivation of our paper primarily draws from the unique regulatory environment REITs operate in. REITs were primarily created as an investment vehicle for institutions that tended to avoid investing in real estate assets because of lack of transparency and liquidity. In essence, the regulation on REITs are geared more to induce investment than to prevent neglect of fiduciary responsibility. There are mainly three good reasons to issue debt. One, it raises cash. Two, interest payments are tax deductible so that the tax shield adds value to the firm. Three, the mandatory interest payment on debt mitigates the agency cost of managerial proclivity to waste cash on poor investments. On the negative side, borrowing exposes the firm to bankruptcy costs; and, leverage may prompt managers to avoid profitable investments to minimize transfer of wealth to bondholders. Like debt, equity raises cash, but issue costs can be significant if investors discount the value of shares out of concern that managers issue shares only when they are overvalued. On balance, debt appears to be the less costly alternative. Over the years, the search for an optimal capital structure has been largely empirical, albeit elusive. A second, and potentially more interesting, motivation of our research is the recent controversy about which theory best describes the prevalent practice in firms’ financing choices. The trade-off theory states that an optimal capital structure exists and this is characterized by the trade off between benefits and costs of borrowing. Among the benefits, the most significant is the tax deductibility of interest payments, but costs of financial distress can be substantial. While firms deviate from the optimum capital structure in the short term, the long term capital structure is invariant. The theory implies that adjustments in capital structure in response to fluctuations in valuation of the firm, and capital needs are temporary; capital structure regresses to the optimal level in the long run. The evidence on actual capital structure choices lends only scant support to the trade off theory. 1
  • 3. The pecking order theory developed by Myers and Majluf (1984) is more potent simply because it provides a better description of actual managerial behavior. The model, based on information asymmetry between shareholder and managers, says that if managers are more informed than shareholders about the firm’s prospects, they would be tempted to sell new shares only when they are overvalued. Wary shareholders will anticipate this and revalue shares downwards. Under this scenario, stock prices will always react negatively to equity issues. Consequently, managers who act in shareholders’ interest will always avoid issuing new stock, and prefer issuing less risky debt instead. This implies that high growth firms, particularly those with insufficient free cash flow will have high debt ratios. A more dynamic version of the theory states that high growth firms may reduce leverage and use retained earnings for current investment to avoid issuing equity if and when need for additional funds arises in the future. An important implication of the theory is that no optimal capital structure exists, rather capital structure evolves in response to the firm’s investment opportunities. Shyam-Sunder and Myers (1999) report evidence consistent with the pecking order theory. A third theory, known as the market timing theory [Baker and Wurgler (2003)], is more behavioral in nature and scope and simply states that long-term capital structure is merely a manifestation of manager’s attempts to time equity issues to coincide with high market valuation. According to this theory, firms with high growth and investment opportunities have high market values and tend to issue equity more often, resulting in low leverage ratios. The idea is that if market associates high market values with low adverse selection costs, that presents high growth firms with the opportunity to issue equity at an advantage. It is noteworthy that the market timing theory and the simple pecking order theory have opposite implications for the relation between market values and debt ratios. Neither theory identifies an optimal capital structure, however. A final question that has attracted considerable attention is whether changes in capital structure are permanent. Trade off theory implies that any change in capital structure is temporary and firms regress to the long term optimum over time. There is no such implication under the pecking order or the market timing theories. An evidence of a permanent relation between the need (investment opportunities) and sources (financing choices) of capital is sufficient to unequivocally reject the trade off theory. While the theoretical underpinnings of the theories are well developed, the empirical evidence is mixed, at best. It is only recently that the empirical enquiries have focused on the dynamics of the evolution of capital structure over time. Shyam-Sunder and Myers (1999) claim support for the pecking order theory, Frank and Goyal (2002) refute it, and Fama and French (2002) report findings consistent with, and contrary to both trade off and pecking order stories. In 2
  • 4. the most comprehensive analysis of market timing theory to date, Baker and Wurgler (2002) interpret the evidence to be in conformity with the market timing theory to the exclusion of the other two. It is worth noting all studies of capital structure decisions over time reject trade off theory unequivocally. Because of their unique regulatory environment, we contend, REITs are an ideal laboratory setting to provide additional evidence on these competing theories. First, REITs do not pay any taxes if 95% of taxable earnings are paid out as dividends. Second, high payout implies that REITs have low free cash flow, such that managers have little opportunity to waste cash on non value-maximizing acquisitions. REITs face the usual costs of financial distress, however. Absence of tax deductibility of interest payments, and reduced agency conflict, immediately suggest REITs should have no debt in their capital structure. The anecdotal evidence is clearly inconsistent with this notion.1 The requirement that 95% of the taxable earnings be paid out as dividends forces REITs to raise funds from the capital market where debt is a less attractive alternative than taxable firms, and the agency cost benefit of debt is also muted. Turning to equity, however, entails the costs of adverse selection which must be borne by the existing shareholders. We argue that these costs are particularly severe for REITs. For example, monitoring REIT managers calls for special skills and knowledge about general and local economic trends, conditions of comparable properties, complex financing arrangements, other specialized skills, and even inside information [Han (2004)]. In addition, since REITs are involved in real property transactions that include a wide range of heterogeneous, illiquid assets, it is difficult for shareholders to determine the fair market values of these transactions. This results in lack of transparency which makes monitoring of managers critical. As Ghosh and Sirmans (2001, 2003, 2004), and Han (2004) observe, however, REITs must abide by special regulations that can weaken or render ineffective the standard governance mechanisms. To elaborate, to qualify as a REIT, the firm must maintain a diversified ownership with at least 100 shareholders, the five biggest of which may not own more than 50 percent of the total shares outstanding. Campbell et al. (2001) contribute the lack of hostile takeovers among REITs to this regulation. This unique ownership structure diminishes the effectiveness of monitoring by the market for corporate control, and exacerbates the lack of transparency. In essence, issuing equity is a particularly costly proposition for REITs. Under this scenario, pecking order theory predicts financing first with retained earnings, then debt, and 1 Brown and Riddiough (2003) reports that over the period September 1993 to March 1998, REITs made a 120 debt offerings of $133m each, on average. 3
  • 5. equity last. Since retained earnings are very low for REITs, pecking order leans heavily towards debt financing. Finally, market timing theory suggests that managers look for opportunities to time equity issues when adverse selection costs are low. It may be argued that these opportunities are relatively scarce for REITs because of lack of transparency and incomplete monitoring. In summary, the trade off prediction of all equity contradicts anecdotal evidence, pecking order calls for predominantly debt financing, and market timing suggests selling equity if opportunities exist. We suggest that REITs will prefer to issue debt whenever the cost of discounted equity exceeds the cost of financial distress, and equity otherwise. The choice of financing is essentially an empirical issue. The clear advantage with REITs is that because of low retained earnings, the financing decision may come down to a simple choice between debt and equity. To determine how capital structure evolves over time, and the persistence of capital structure change, a time series analysis of the relation between needs and sources of financing must be conducted. Baker and Wurgler (2002) study the firms’ financing decision from the initial public offering (IPO). Conceivably, issuing debt is not appealing at the IPO stage because young firms are considered more risky. As the firm matures, financing decisions reflect both pure adjustments (if any) in capital structure and need for investment funds. It is generally assumed that need for funds is a function of the firm’s investment and growth opportunities and the standard sources of capital include retained earnings and security issuances. The standard proxy for need for funds is the market value to book value ratio, the assumption being that high market value reflects market’s assessment that the firm has access to profitable investment opportunities. We analyze the capital structure decisions of REITs over the period 1992 to 2003 using the same approach as Baker and Wurgler (2002). Over this period, we follow the REITs from the year they go IPO to the last surviving year. The sample size is therefore driven by the IPO activity of REITs. The most active years were 1994, 1995 and 1996 when over 50 REIT IPOs raised capital. The smallest sample size is 4 in 1992, steadily growing to the largest sample size of 108 in 2003. We use market to book ratio as a proxy for investment opportunities and firm’s need for capital. The analyses based on contemporaneous data reveal a weakly significant positive relation between M/B ratio and leverage, strongly negative relation between M/B ratio and net equity issues, and weak relation between M/B and retained earnings. The long term weighted average M/B ratio is a strongly significant determinant for leverage ratio which suggests that the effect on M/B ratio on leverage is not transient and firms do not adjust their leverage ratios to a target level. The long-term persistence of leverage decisions is inconsistent with the trade off theory. The long-term as well as the contemporaneous evidence is not 4
  • 6. consistent with the market timing theory. We find weak evidence in favor of the pecking order theory from the yearly analysis, but strong support from the long-term regressions results. The findings for REIT are intriguing in that they are contrary to the recent evidence in Baker and Wurglar (2002) for a broader data set, and subject to interpretation vis-a-vis the conclusions in Brown and Riddiough’s (2003) analysis of REIT capital structure. Baker and Wurglar find evidence in line with the market timing theory. A potential explanation for the differential findings is that the window of opportunity when adverse selection costs are low is less frequent and narrower for REITs. The lack of transparency of real estate assets, and the consequent information asymmetry is a contributing factor. Reinforcing the problem is the restrictive ownership requirements in REITs which makes it difficult for blockholders to form ownership stakes, and diminishes their incentive to monitor management. A sheltered management widens the credibility gap between shareholders and managers. Brown and Riddiough (2003) analyze public issues by REITs over the years 1993-1998 and document several stylized characteristics of these offers. An important finding is that offer spreads are positively related to maturity, which suggests that if performance improves and market value increases over time, market expects REITs to sell more debt so that, ex ante, offer spreads are higher for longer maturity issues. The authors further report that REITs use public issue proceeds primarily for investment purposes so that security sales often induce capital structure changes. These findings are consistent with the existence of a target leverage ratio as suggested by the trade off theory. However, testing the theories of capital structure requires that a time series analysis of financing decisions be undertaken. In the short run, trade off and pecking order (market timing) theories make similar predictions for firms that are underleveraged (overleveraged). Long run analysis facilitates separating the alternative theories. The paper proceeds as follows. Section II summarizes the prior research on capital structure. Section III develops the hypotheses under the regulatory environment of REITs. Section IV describes the data. We present and discuss our models and results in section V, and conclude in section VI. II. Literature Review A. Tradeoff Theory Tradeoff theory posits that the firm has a target debt ratio which is determined by the tradeoff between the costs and benefits of borrowing, with the firm’s assets and investment plans held constant. The most significant benefit of debt financing is the tax shield of interest 5
  • 7. payments. Mandatory interest payment reduces free cash flow which mitigates the agency conflict between securityholders and managers. This implies higher leverage and payout ratios for profitable firms, and the opposite for firms with more investments. The cost of financial distress is the major downside of debt financing. Further, from the shareholders’ perspective, leverage may induce managers of struggling firms to avoid profitable investments because most of the benefit accrues to the debtholders. Marsh (1982) studies the security issuances by UK companies between 1959 and 1974. He documents that companies which are below their long term or above their short term debt targets are more likely to issue debt. Firm size, cost of financial distress and asset composition were the significant determinants of firm’s leverage ratio. He also finds some evidence for the market timing theory. Specifically, the results demonstrate that firms with large share price increases tend to issue equity, and prevailing market conditions influence firms’ finance decisions. Titman and Wessels (1998) find that debt ratio is negatively related to the ‘uniqueness’ of a firm’s line of business, and interpret this result as supportive of tradeoff theory. They also report that transaction costs are an important determinant of leverage ratios, and past profitability tends to reduce a firm’s debt level. The latter evidence is more in line with the pecking order theory. Rajan and Zingales (1995) use a sample of corporations from G-7 countries to investigate the capital structure choices across countries. They find some evidence consistent with tradeoff theory. For example, tangibility is positively correlated with leverage in all countries. Consistent with market timing, the market-to-book ratio has a significant and consistently negative relationship with leverage in all countries. Size is positively correlated with leverage and profitability is negatively correlated with leverage in all countries except Germany. These can be interpreted as generally consistent with the tradeoff theory. As the authors point out, however, a deeper examination of the evidence suggests that the current capital structure models fail to fully explain the observed patterns. Under the tradeoff theory, deviations from target capital structure are only temporary. In a dynamic setting, firms make financing choices to adjust the debt ratio to the long-term optimum which implies that no systematic relation between debt ratio and the firm’s investment opportunities is predicted. However, if costs of financial distress varies across firms, a cross sectional variation in optimum capital structure is expected. For example, high-growth firms that are more sensitive to fluctuations in business outlook and are therefore more vulnerable due to the costs of financial distress, choose to use less debt financing. Highly profitable firms, on the other hand, can risk higher debt ratios. The findings in Smith and Watts (1992) and Barclay, Morellec, and Smith (2001) are consistent with this notion. 6
  • 8. B. Pecking Order Theory Developed by Mayers (1984) and Mayers and Majluf (1984), the pecking order assumes that managers have privileged information regarding the firm’s value that investors do not have. This raises the potential that opportunistic managers will sell equity only when it is overvalued. New shareholders will therefore avoid or discount equity which implies that only poorly performing firms will have the incentive to issue equity. The avoidance of adverse selection cost is the main motivation for firms to prefer the safest security available, which means that firms always choose debt over equity if bankruptcy costs are not an immediate concern. Hence, high growth firms that need more external capital end up with high leverage ratio. The dynamic pecking order theory, however, predicts that, holding profitability constant, firms with more investment opportunities keep payout low to conserve funds, and maintain low leverage to preserve debt capacity so as not to be forced into high debt in the future. These firms are forced to have high leverage only if adjustments in dividend payout are difficult, and investment commitments are persistently large. On the other hand, holding investments fixed, more profitable firms have higher payout ratios and lower leverage ratios because they have larger cash reserves, and can withstand adversities better. Shyam-Sunder and Myers (1999) study a sample of mature corporations with continuous data on flow of funds between 1971 and 1989. They find that pecking order theory has much greater time-series explanatory power than a static tradeoff model. They conclude that pecking order is an excellent first-order descriptor of corporate financing behavior. Clearly, if companies have well-defined optimal debt ratios, managers are not much interested in getting there. One criticism of the Shyam-Sunder and Myers (1999) study is that the inferences are based on a rather small sample. Fama and French (2002) present a comprehensive analysis of the complementary and contrasting implications of the tradeoff and pecking order theories for both dividend payout and leverage ratios. They identify profitability and investments and the interaction thereof as the key determinants of financing and dividend decisions. Consistent with both trade off and dynamic pecking order theories, they find firms with more investments are less levered. Next, their finding that more profitable firms have less leverage supports the pecking order, and contradicts the trade off story. Further support for the pecking order theory draws from the evidence that for dividend paying firms, short-term variation in investment and earnings is mostly absorbed by debt. Finally, the authors report that the least-levered and non-dividend paying firms (typically 7
  • 9. small, growth firms) make the largest net new issues of equity which is contrary to the pecking order theory. Among other authors to report evidence inconsistent with pecking order theory are Helwege and Liang (1996) and Frank and Goyal (2002). Using a panel of IPO firms, Helwege and Liang (1996) find no relationship between the decision to raise external funds and the shortfall of internally generated funds. Studying the financial activities of US firms from 1971 to 1988, Frank and Goyal (2002) conclude that new equity issues track the financing deficit more closely than debt issues, a clear contradiction of the pecking order model. C. Market Timing Theory Market Timing Theory suggests that firms tend to issue stock when the market condition is favorable, and issue debt when the stock market is under the cloud. Graham and Harvey (2001) report that most CFOs agree that prior stock price movement and perception of under- or over-valuation of firms’ stock play important roles in their decision to raise external funds. Assuming that the ratio of market value to book value reflects investment opportunities, the market timing theory [Baker and Wurgler (2002)] asserts a negative relation between market value to book value ratio and the firm’s leverage ratio. This is contradictory to the simple form of the pecking order theory, but consistent with the more dynamic form. Baker and Wurgler (2002) demonstrate that leverage is negatively related to ‘external finance weighted-average’ market-to- book ratio which implies that past market valuation has a significant and persistently negative impact on firm’s leverage ratio. Their data further reveal that most of the financing is done by issuing equity, not through retained earnings. The authors reject the trade off and pecking order models and interpret the result as supportive of the notion that current leverage ratio is a cumulative outcome of firm’s previous attempts to time the market. In summary, while the three theories have several overlapping implications, they also make some predictions that can be useful to infer which one best fits observed capital structure choices. We highlight the aspects of each theory that is unique. The trade off theory predicts a target capital structure that firms regress to in the long run, implying that any relation between capital structure and profitability or investments is transient. Neither the pecking order theory nor the market timing theory identifies an optimum capital structure. For dividend-paying (non dividend-paying) firms, the pecking order theory predicts a long run positive (negative) relation between market to book value ratio and leverage ratio. The market timing theory leads to a long run positive relation between market to book value ratio and leverage ratio for all classes of firms; 8
  • 10. the difference between the two is that under pecking order, funds are drawn from retained earnings while for market timing, equity sales is the source for capital. III. REIT Regulatory Environment and Capital Structure In this section, we explore the implications of the various theories of capital structure from the perspective of REIT regulatory environment, and develop the hypotheses. In addition, we provide a review of the extant evidence on capital structure of REITs. A. Theoretical considerations REITs are not required to pay corporate taxes if they distribute 95% of taxable income as dividends. This nullifies two significant benefits of debt financing. One, the tax deductibility of interest payments and the tax shield is non-existent. Second, since most of the earnings is distributed, debt servicing has only limited impact on agency cost of free cash flow. Accordingly, REITs should have one hundred percent equity under the trade off theory. Costs of financial distress further reinforce the preference for equity. The only effect that induces less than all equity capital is that asymmetric information between shareholders and managers causes valuation discounts. In the aggregate, if REITs have an optimum capital structure, it includes relatively low level of debt. The main motivation to prefer debt over equity issues is that managers may use privileged information to sell overvalued equity and shareholders are aware of it. So, an equity issue is always discounted by the market. Greater the information asymmetry, higher is the discount. Information asymmetry is particularly severe in REITs because the transparency of the underlying assets is less than perfect. For example, analysis of REIT assets may require special skills and knowledge about general and local economic trends, conditions of comparable properties, and complex financing arrangements. In addition, shareholders may find it difficult to determine the fair market values of real estate transactions because they often include heterogeneous, and illiquid assets. Restrictions on REIT’s income sources and investment options may further exacerbate the information asymmetry. The restrictions that REITs derive their income largely from real estate activities, and that acquisitions and combinations be restricted to the real estate sector, allow managers but limited opportunity to acquire inter industry skills, makes them less employable, and induces them to avoid hostile takeovers [Campbell, Ghosh, and Sirmans]. The 9
  • 11. requirement that no single investor owns more than 10 percent of REIT shares deters blockholder formation. In conjunction, these regulations make managers less vulnerable to the discipline of the takeover market, and render the board weak. Weak monitoring allows opportunistic managers to reveal less information. Under this scenario, REITs would be expected to avoid equity issues and prefer funding investment from retained earnings first, then sell debt if more capital is needed. A more complex form of pecking order, Myers (1984) notes, states that firms with generous reserves of cash may avoid issuing debt to preserve debt capacity for future capital needs, implying a negative long-term relation between leverage and market to book value ratio. REITs, however, are not expected to have big accumulation of cash and retained capital because of the payout requirement, which implies that they have to resort to debt financing more often. Thus, the pecking order theory predicts a long term positive relation between leverage and market to book ratio. Why would REITs issue equity despite the potential for high adverse selection costs? One reason, Baker and Wurgler (2003) assert, is that adverse selection costs vary over time and across firms, and managers take advantage of these opportunities to favorably time equity issues. Opportunities for timing equity sales also arise as irrational investors periodically bid up share prices to abnormally high levels. Because of the reasons narrated above, the opportunities of low adverse selection costs may be relatively infrequent for REITs. Under this premise, the market timing theory prediction of a long-term negative (positive) relation between market to book value ratio and leverage (equity issues) is questionable for REITs. The theories and hypotheses are summarized in table 1. Trade off theory predicts a low long term target debt ratio. The simple pecking order theory implies a positive relation between debt ratio and market value to book value ratio. The complex pecking order theory which implies a negative relation between market to book ratio and leverage for cash rich firms may not hold for REITs. The market timing theory predicts a negative relation between market value to book value ratio and leverage and requires opportunities when adverse selection costs are low, a less likely event for REITs. B. Empirical Evidence The first attempt to analyze capital structure of REITs from the perspective of valuation was made by Howe and Shilling (1988) who state that, under the trade off theory, as a non-tax- paying enterprise, the tax gain to corporate borrowing is strictly negative for REITs, such that a negative reaction to debt issues is predicted. A negative reaction is consistent also with the 10
  • 12. pecking order implication that issuing a security constitutes a negative signal that it is overvalued, and the implied-cash-flow change hypothesis [Smith (1986)] which states that unexpected security offerings suggest that operating cash flows are lower than expected. A positive reaction to debt sales follows only from Ross’s (1977) assertion that debt issues convey the favorable information that future earnings will be sufficiently large to support the mandatory interest payments. Extant literature [Mikkelson and Partch (1986), and Eckbo (1986)] documents non- positive to significantly negative reaction to debt offerings. Contrary to these studies, Howe and Shilling (1988) find a significant positive reaction, which they interpret as weak support for Ross’s signaling hypothesis. In an important and comprehensive piece, Brown and Riddiough (2003) study the public offerings by equity REITs between September 1993 and March 1998, and identify numerous patterns in the issuance behavior. While the scope of the research seems limited to identifying some stylized facts about REIT capital structure, certain results have bearing on our analyses. A significant finding is that maturity of public REIT debt is positively related to offer spread. The authors point out that if credit market participants assess that REITs issue debt when they are aggressively leveraged, and if they anticipate that REIT balance sheets will strengthen in the future, then credit spreads should decline with maturity. On the other hand, if REITs issue public debt at long-term target leverage ratios, then credit spreads are predicted to increase with maturity. The evidence therefore suggests the existence of a long-term target debt ratio. Two, the authors report that majority of the firms are clustered just above the investment- grade rating, and REITs that issue public debt are debt capital constrained. While this result also suggests a target long-run debt ratio, an alternative explanation – consistent with pecking order theory -- is that as long as REITs can attain minimum investment-grade credit rating, they prefer to issue debt instead of equity to boost their credit ratings. Further, a significant number of REITs that issue equity are highly leveraged and remain so subsequently. Apparently, firms issue equity only when bankruptcy threat looms large, and even at this juncture, they raise just enough equity capital to mitigate the funding pressure. Finally, REITs with higher total assets and revenues are more likely to issue debt, another indication that when bankruptcy risk is low, managers choose debt financing, just as pecking order prescribes. Also in conformity with the pecking order model, REITs largely fund investment with bank lines of credit and other sources of private debt. When these sources are exhausted, REITs access the public capital market and use the issue proceeds to pay down credit lines in order to prepare for the next round of financing. Overall, Brown and Riddiough’s (2003) data suggest that despite no obvious tax advantage, the standard deadweight costs of financial distress, and the pecking order and free 11
  • 13. cash flow rationales being muted by the dividend payout requirements2, REITs prefer issuing debt and choose equity only as a last recourse. Howe and Shilling’s (1988) analysis demonstrates that the market approves of this choice. While this is powerful evidence, it is based on static analysis. To our knowledge, the evolution of capital structure over time has not been explored for REITs. Our paper fills the gap. IV. Data and Summary Statistics Our study includes REITs that went IPO during 1991 to 2003 and for which all accounting and firm specific information required for analyses from 1991 to 2003 are available in the SNL database. We collect each firm’s financial information, including total debt, total equity, total assets, total revenue, net income, depreciation, dividend amount, total investment in real estate, stock price, and the total number of shares outstanding. We also identify the IPO date for each firm during 1991 to 2003. Table 2 shows the number of REITs in SNL database that went IPO between 1991-2003, and number of REITs in the final sample by IPO year and calendar year. Most of REITs have accounting and financing information one year prior to the year of interest, and hence are included in the analysis to investigate the temporary impact of market-to-book on leverage ratio. However, missing values reduce the sample size when we test the long-term relationship between market-to-book and leverage ratios. This limits the scope and interpretation of our results somewhat. As shown in panel A of table 2, the number of REITs in the sample is only 4 in 1992. The IPO activity picks up between 1994 and 1996 when the sample size jumps to 83 and then stabilizes at 108 in 2003. That most firms survived during the entire period under study is apparent in the low attrition reported in panel B. By the tenth year after IPO, as many as 30 of the original 33 REITs remained in the sample. However, as evident in column 2, availability of data is very limited for young IPO firms during the early years of our study. For example, only 68 of the eligible 107 firms have data in the first year after IPO. The proportion is much higher as the firms mature. Leverage is measured as the ratio of book value of debt to book value of assets. As Myers (1977) points out, market values incorporate the value of the call option on firm’s future ‘growth opportunities’. Debt issued against these values can distort future real investment decisions. As a result, in practice, managers have a good reason to calculate debt ratios using 2 Free cash flow rationale of debt financing states that mandatory interest payment on debt mitigates the agency cost of free cash flow. This is muted for REITs by the regulatory requirement to payout 95% of taxable income as dividends. 12
  • 14. book values. Additionally, we investigate the impact of investment opportunities on leverage ratios. Titman and Wessels (1988) and Fama and French (2002) suggest that a negative relationship between market leverage and investment opportunities may simply be a manifestation of better investment producing higher market values, rather than the workings of trade-off and pecking order models. The definition and measurement of key variables follows Baker and Wurgler (2002). Book debt is total assets minus book equity. Book equity is defined as total assets less total liabilities and preferred stock plus deferred taxes and convertible debt. Book leverage is calculated as the ratio of book debt to total assets (D/A). Market leverage is book debt divided by total assets minus book equity plus market equity. Market equity is the product of number of shares outstanding and the stock price. Net equity issues (e/A) is defined as the change in book equity minus the change in retained earnings divided by assets. Newly retained earnings (∆RE/A) is the ratio of net income minus dividend to total assets. We calculate the net debt issued (d/A) as the residual change in assets divided by total assets. Market-to-book value ratio (M/B) is defined as total assets minus book equity plus market equity divided by total assets. In table 3, we report the summary statistics of REITs leverage ratios and their financing by IPO year in panel A and by calendar year in panel B. Three patterns are worth noting. First, REITs have relatively high book leverage compared to non-REIT firms in the compustat data base studied by Baker and Wurgler (2002). During 1991 to 2003, REITs maintain a debt ratio of above 50 percent. More recently, the book debt ratio is well above 60 percent. In contrast, non- REIT firms from 1974 to 1999 have an average debt ratio below 50 percent. Analyses over calendar years reveal the same pattern. Higher leverage ratio for REITs is consistent with the pecking order theory, but contrary to tradeoff and market timing models. Tradeoff theory predicts lower book leverage for REITs due to the tax exempt status and lower free cash flow problem. The business nature of REITs makes it harder for their shareholders to discover the market values of investment transactions, which usually involves a wide range of heterogeneous, illiquid assets. According to the pecking order model, firms with high asymmetric information tend to resort to debt when they need external funds, and are more likely to have high leverage ratios. Market timing certainly provides no rationale for this phenomenon. If REITs behave like other firms in choosing the source of external capital, and raise equity under favorable market conditions and debt under unfavorable market conditions, it is hard to reconcile why REITs, on average, have higher leverage ratios relative to other types of firms. 13
  • 15. Second, we observe an increasing trend in debt ratio as the maturity of REIT firm increases. This trend is consistent with table 2 in Baker and Wurgler (2002). The average debt ratio is 52 percent one year after IPO and steadily grows to 66 percent ten years later. If firms have a target capital structure in mind, it is difficult to reconcile why debt ratio is growing continuously over the years. The average debt ratio also increases over the calendar years. This trend can be explained only as an age effect, not a survival effect. Most REITs in 2003 have a trading history of at least 4 to 5 years. This pattern contradicts the reversion to target capital structure over time prescribed by the trade off theory. Finally, REITs issue more debt than equity in nine out of ten years after IPO (seven out of ten years based on calendar year). Although the percentage of net debt issued is decreasing over the years, it is the driving force in the annual change in total assets. Consistent with the prediction of pecking order theory, this result suggests that REIT managers turn to debt financing first, before they consider equity financing. On the other hand, both tradeoff theory and market timing theories predict firms depend on debt financing in some years and on equity financing in other years depending on leverage ratio and cost of adverse selection cost. In table 4, we report the correlation between various variables. Most interesting is the persistently positive relation between book leverage ratio and market-to-book ratio over the past ten years. The 9-year back market-to-book ratio is still positively associated with the current book leverage ratio. The univariate analysis thus demonstrates a persistent and positive long-term impact of market-to-book on leverage ratio, which constitutes strong evidence against trade off and market timing theories, and strong support for the pecking order story. V. Models and Empirical Results Implications of trade off, pecking order, and market timing theories are usually expressed in terms of how leverage ratio varies with profitability and investment opportunities. We use market-to-book value ratio as a proxy for investment opportunities. Brown and Riddiough’s (2003) finding that the market is more sympathetic to financing for investment purposes than adjustments in capital structure provides some justification for the use of M/B ratio as a determinant of debt ratio. Under trade off theory, bankruptcy costs are lower, and leverage higher for more profitable firms. To minimize agency cost of free cash flow, profitable firms use higher leverage to disgorge more of firm’s excess cash. Conversely, firms with more investment opportunities have less free cash flow and can have low leverage ratio. Pecking order theory asserts that to avoid sale of discounted equity, firms fund investment with retained earnings first, 14
  • 16. then debt, and finally equity. It follows that if profitability and investments are persistent, leverage is lower for profitable firms, and higher for firms with more investment opportunities. Dividend payment reinforces the relationship. Market timing theory predicts that managers time equity issues when equity is overvalued. If investment opportunities are persistent, a long-term negative relation between market to book ratio and leverage ratio is predicted. A. The relationship between market-to-book and leverage ratios In this section, we investigate the determinants of annual changes in leverage. Following Baker and Wurgler (2002) and Rajan and Zingales (1995), we include three variables that are correlated with leverage. ⎛D⎞ ⎛D⎞ ⎛M ⎞ ⎛ REinvestment ⎞ ⎛ EBITDA ⎞ ⎜ ⎟ − ⎜ ⎟ = a + b⎜ ⎟ + c⎜ ⎟ + d⎜ ⎟ ⎝ A ⎠t ⎝ A ⎠t −1 ⎝ B ⎠t −1 ⎝ A ⎠t −1 ⎝ A ⎠t −1 ⎛D⎞ + e log( S ) t − 1 + f ⎜ ⎟ + u t (1) ⎝ A ⎠ t −1 The sign of coefficient b is the main focus of this equation. Both tradeoff and market timing theory predict a negative sign, while pecking order suggests the opposite. A more complicated version of pecking order asserts that firms with larger expected dividends may keep current leverage low to preserve debt capacity so as to avoid funding future investments with new risky securities [Myers (1984)]. For REITs, however, such a strategy may not be feasible because of the 95% payout requirement. We use percentage of real estate investment as proxy for asset tangibility in equation (1). Tangible assets may be used as collateral and hence may be associated with higher leverage. However, REITs are expected to have most of the assets as tangible assets, such that much variability is not expected in the data. Hence, we do not expect a relationship between tangible assets and leverage ratios. Profitability is associated with the availability of internal cash flows, which implies lower leverage ratio under the pecking order theory. However, REITs are required to pay out 95 percent of the earnings as dividends. Hence, there is limited free cash flow and a significant relationship between profitability and leverage may not emerge. The natural logarithm of total revenue is used as a proxy for firm size. As large firms are less likely to suffer financial distress, they might be associated with high leverage if the financial distress costs are considered to be of first-order importance to the firms (as tradeoff theory suggests). Fama and 15
  • 17. French (2002) argue that larger firms may have less volatile earnings which will also induce a higher leverage ratio. Therefore, in accordance with trade off theory, we expect the coefficient of firm size to have a positive sign. Finally, we add the lagged leverage in our model, as Baker and Wurgler (2002) suggest, to control for the fact that debt ratio is bounded from 0 to 1. It is expected to have a negative sign3. Panel A of table 5 reports the regression results from equation (1). We run this model for each year after IPO (IPO regressions). This allows us to study the changes (if any) in capital structure as the firm matures. We also construct the full 1991 to 2003 SNL sample for comparison. The regression estimates for the sample with all firms contains multiple observations on the same firm from different calendar year. First, the negative and significant coefficient of real estate investment and non-significance of the coefficient of firm size do not support the implications of the tradeoff theory. The evidence on profitability is mixed. Second, the market-to-book ratio is significant only in three of the ten IPO years. When it is significant, the sign is positive. The market-to-book is positive and significant in the all firms regression which is contrary to market timing and the trade off theory, but consistent with the pecking order story. It is also interesting to note that the non-negative coefficient for M/B is not consistent with the Myers (1984) dynamic form of pecking order model which states that in anticipation of funding requirements for higher investments in the future, firms may preserve debt capacity by using retained earnings for current needs. While regular dividend paying firms with stable cash flow are most capable of following this strategy, REITs are at a disadvantage because of high payout requirements. In essence, the positive sign for M/B ratio allows us to unequivocally reject the trade off, market timing and the dynamic form of pecking order theory. The evidence, however, can be interpreted only as preliminary and weak support for the simple pecking order theory. Further confirmation for the model must await analysis of the different funding sources. B. Components of Leverage change Following Baker and Wurgler (2002), we further decompose the change in leverage into equity issues, retained earnings, and the residual change in leverage, which depends on the total growth in assets from the combination of equity issues, debt issues, and newly retained earnings. 3 This coefficient is negative in 7 of 10 IPO years, as well as in the All Firms regression. When it is positive, it is never significant in any level. 16
  • 18. ⎛D⎞ ⎛D⎞ ⎛e ⎞ ⎛ ∆REt ⎞ ⎡ ⎛1 1 ⎞⎤ ⎜ ⎟ − ⎜ ⎟ = −⎜ t ⎜A ⎟−⎜ ⎟ ⎜ A ⎟ − ⎢ Et −1 ⎜ − ⎟ ⎜ A A ⎟⎥ ⎟ (2) ⎝ A ⎠t ⎝ A ⎠t −1 ⎝ t ⎠ ⎝ t ⎠ ⎣ ⎝ t t −1 ⎠ ⎦ This decomposition allows us to identify more specifically the driving force behind the leverage change. We use each component as our dependent variable and run the same regressions for each IPO year, as well as for all firms from 1991 to 2003. The results are presented in panels B, C and D of table 5. As Braker and Wurgler (2002) point out, the coefficients in panel A should equal the summation of the corresponding coefficients from panels B, C and D. The results in panel B indicate that market-to-book ratio has impact -- through net equity issues -- on changes in leverage as predicted by market timing. In five out of ten IPO regressions as well as in the regression for all firms, we find net equity issues help to reduce the leverage ratio when the market valuations of the firms are high. However, these effects are not significant in the other half of the IPO regressions. Also, consistent with our expectation, panel C shows only weakly significant impact of internally generated funds on REITs’ leverage ratio. In contrast, we find significant impact of market-to-book on changes in leverage through asset growth (panel D). In nine out of ten IPO regressions as well as the all firms regression, the coefficients of market-to- book are significant at the conventional levels. These coefficients are larger in terms of absolute value compared to those in panel B. In the all firms regression, the coefficient for market-to-book is 12.88 in panel D compared to 8.66 in panel B. Hence, the dominant factor for change in leverage ratio is the growth of total assets. To put it in perspective simply, the growth in total assets is mainly funded by net debt issues. Comparing panels B and D, we conclude that debt funding is the major source for external financing for REIT firms. No other coefficient in the other columns of panels B, C and D is significant. As a result, we believe that market-to-book does have at least a temporary impact on leverage ratio. Firms with higher growth opportunities are more likely to fund their investment through external debt issuance. This statistically and economically significant impact is predicted by pecking order theory, but not by tradeoff or market timing models. C. Long-term impact of market-to-book Next, we investigate whether the impact of market-to-book on leverage ratio is persistent over time as predicted by pecking order and market timing or just temporary as suggested by tradeoff theory. We use the three variables that were reported to be correlated with leverage ratio by Rajan and Zingales (1995) as control variables. 17
  • 19. ⎛D⎞ ⎛M ⎞ ⎛M ⎞ ⎛ REinvestment ⎞ ⎜ ⎟ = a + b⎜ ⎟ + c⎜ ⎟ + d ⎜ ⎟ ⎝ A ⎠t ⎝ B ⎠ efwa ,t −1 ⎝ B ⎠t −1 ⎝ A ⎠t −1 ⎛ EBITDA ⎞ + e⎜ ⎟ + f log( S ) t −1 + u t (3) ⎝ A ⎠ t −1 ⎛M ⎞ t −1 e + ds ⎛ M ⎞ where ⎜ ⎟ = ∑ t −1s .⎜ ⎟ (4) ⎝ B ⎠efwa ,t −1 s = 0 e + d ⎝ B ⎠ s ∑r r r =0 The focus of this analysis is the ‘external finance weighted-average’ market-to-book ratio (eqn. 4) suggested by Baker and Wurgler (2002). We use this weighted average to capture the long term effects of market-to-book on the leverage ratio. This variable takes high values for firms that raise external finance when the market-to-book ratio is high and vice-versa. If firms tend to raise equity when the market-to-book is high reflecting greater investment opportunities, as predicted by the market timing story, then we expect a negative relationship between this variable and the leverage ratio. If firms tend to raise debt when the market-to-book is high, as predicted by pecking order theory, then we expect a positive coefficient for this variable. If the market-to- book has only temporary impact on leverage ratio as suggested by tradeoff theory, then we should not find the coefficient of this variable to be significant. Also, we follow Baker and Wurgler (2002) and allow the minimum weight to be zero in order to ensure the weights are increasing in the total amount of external finance raised in each period. The lagged value of market-to-book is included to control for the current cross-sectional variation in the level of market-to-book. What is left for the weighted market-to-book ratio is the residual influence of past, within-firm variation in market-to-book. In panel A of table 6, we use only the traditional control variables from Rajan and Zingales (1995). We find that current cross sectional market-to-book value has a positive impact on the leverage ratio in three of IPO regressions and the all firms regression. This result is consistent with those reported in previous tables. We also find that other control variables do not have a significant relationship with leverage ratios in most of our IPO regressions as well as the regression including all firms. As discussed previously, this finding is consistent with the unique regulatory characteristics of the REITs. In panel B, we add the weighted average market-to-book ratio in our models to test the long-term relationship between market-to-book and the leverage ratio. We do not include this 18
  • 20. weighted average for IPO+1 and IPO+2 regressions due to the high correlation between this variable and the lag market-to-book ratios. We find that weighted average market-to-book is the most significant variable in determining the cross sectional variation in leverage ratio of REITs. The coefficient of this variable is positive and highly significant in seven out eight IPO regressions and also in the all firms regression, indicating REITs with historically higher market- to-book ratios tend to have persistently higher leverage ratios. The impact of market-to-book is not temporary and capital structure is not mean reverting as suggested by tradeoff theory. REIT managers do not balance their capital structure over a 10-year period. In summary, the market-to- book ratio has a positive and long-term impact on REIT leverage ratios. Pecking Order Theory does a better job predicting this relationship compared to the other two capital structure theories. VI. Synthesis and Discussion The main findings may be summarized as follows: 1. The significantly negative coefficient for tangible assets and the non- significance of size and profitability in the contemporaneous regression contradicts the trade off theory. The persistently significant relation between market to book value ratio and leverage in the long-term regression is inconsistent with the trade off theory as well. 2. Pecking order theory receives weak support from the contemporaneous regression in the positive relation between leverage and market to book ratio. The strongest support for the pecking order story draws from significant relation between market to book ratio and change in leverage through asset growth. The persistent impact of market to book value ratio in the long term regression also shows REITs follow pecking order in financing decisions. 3. In the contemporaneous model, the negative coefficient for market to book ratio contradicts the market timing theory. The evidence of persistently positive impact of weighted market to book in the long term regression strengthens the conclusion. VII. Conclusion The main contribution of this paper is to explore if and how unique regulatory provisions of REITs influence their capital structure decisions. Trade off theory predicts that capital structure represents a trade off between costs and benefits of debt financing; pecking order theory states that under asymmetric information, managers choose to fund investment with retained 19
  • 21. earnings first, then debt, and lastly equity; market timing theory asserts that managers issue equity whenever conditions are favorable. In the long run, trade off theory predicts no relationship between leverage ratio and market to book ratio, pecking order suggests a persistent positive relation, and market timing theory a persistent negative relation between these variables. The tax-exempt status of REITs eliminates the tax shield advantage of debt financing. The requirement that ninety five percent of taxable earnings be paid out as dividends mitigates the agency cost of free cash flow. With no special benefit to debt financing, bankruptcy costs imply one hundred percent equity financing under trade off theory. High payout has an additional effect -- it forces REITs to raise investment capital externally where valuation is uncertain due to information asymmetry between securityholders and managers. REIT shareholders are especially vulnerable because real estate assets tend to be illiquid and less transparent. Regulatory restrictions on sources of income and choices of assets that REITs are allowed to invest in further exacerbate the information asymmetry. To elaborate, regulation limiting managers’ investment options narrows their experience to sector specific assets. To prevent job loss, these entrenched managers may collude to forestall hostile takeover threats, and create an environment where discipline and monitoring by the market corporate control is weakened. Finally, regulatory restriction on ownership size makes takeovers difficult and acts as a disincentive to institutional investors and blockholders. Thus protected, REIT managers are under little pressure to reveal full information. If shareholders recognize this agency problem to be persistent, new share issues would be deeply discounted, and opportunities to sell equity scarce. Under this scenario, debt financing is the preferred choice so that the pecking order theory rather than the market timing theory provides a more apt description of expected managerial behavior in REITs. We analyze REITs’ financing choice over a number of years following their IPO. The objective is to explore how REIT capital structure evolves in response to needs for investment capital. The data reveal no indication of regression to a long term optimum capital structure, as trade off theory would suggest. Rather, REITs with historically high market-to-book ratio tend to have high leverage ratio. In essence, REITs with high growth opportunity and high market valuation raise most of their needed funds through debt issuance. This finding is contrary to the financing decisions of non-regulated firms. We attribute it to the special regulatory environment of REITs where, despite no apparent benefits to debt financing, management prefers issuing debt to equity to raise funds because the adverse selection costs due to information asymmetry exceeds the potential costs of financial distress. This analysis has significant implications for the literature on corporate capital structure decisions. 20
  • 22. 21
  • 23. References Baker, Malcolm and Jeffrey Wurgler, 2002, Market Timing and Capital Structure, Journal of Finance, Vol. LVII, No. 1, pp 1 – 32. Barclay, Michael J., Clifford W. Smith, Jr., and Ross L. Watts, 1995, The Determinants of Corporate Leverage and Dividend Policies, Journal of Applied Corporate Finance, 7, pp 4 – 19. Brown, David T. and Timothy J. Riddiough, 2003, Financing Choice and Liability Structure of Real Estate Investment Trusts, Real Estate Economics, V31, pp 313 – 346. Frank, Murray Z., and Vidhan K. Goyal, 2003, Testing the Pecking Order Theory of Capital Structure, Journal of Financial Economics, pp 217 – 248. Fama, Eugene F. and Kenneth R. French, 2002, Testing Trade-Off and Pecking Order Predication about Dividends and Debt, Review of Financial Studies, Vol. 15, No. 1, pp 1 – 33. Graham, John R. and Campbell R. Harvey, 2001, The Theory and Practice of Corporate Finance: Evidence from the Field, Journal of Financial Economics 60, pp 187 – 243. Harris, Milton and Artur Raviv, 1991, The Theory of Capital Strucuture, Journal of Finance, Vol. XLVI, No. 1, pp 297 – 355. Helwege, Jean and Nellie Liang, 1996, Is There A Pecking Order? Evidence from A Panel of IPO Firms, Journal of Financial Economics 40, pp 429 – 458. Marsh, Paul, 1982, The Choice Between Equity and Debt: An Empirical Study, Journal of Finance, Vol. XXXVII, No. 1, pp 121 – 144. Myers, Stewart C., 1977, Determinants of Corporate Borrowing, Journal of Financial Economics 5, pp 147 – 175. Myers, Stewart C., 1984, The Capital Structure Puzzle, Journal of Finance, Vol. XXXIX, No. 3, pp 575 – 592. Myers, Stewart C. and Nicholas S. Majluf, 1984, Corporate Financing and Investment Decisions When Firms Have Information That Investors Do Not Have, Journal of Financial Economics 13, pp 187 – 221. Rajan, Raghuram G. and Luigi Zingales, 1995, What Do We Know about Capital Structure? Some Evidence from International Data, Journal of Finance, Vol. L, No. 5, pp 1421 – 1460. Shyam-Sunder, Lakshmi and Stewart C. Myers, 1999, Testing Static Tradeoff Against Pecking Order Models of Capital Structure, Journal of Financial Economics 51, pp 219 – 244. Titman, Sheridan and Roberto Wessels, 1988, The Determinants of Capital Structure Choice, Journal of Finance, Vol. XLIII, No. 1, pp 1 – 19. 22
  • 24. Table 1: Theories of capital structure and REIT regulatory environment Theory Impact Variables Debt and M/B ratio Real Estate Regulation Trade-off: A long-term Tax-deductibility of interest payments Firms with high M/B ratio (high growth and REITs are exempt from corporate taxes if 95% of current earnings are optimum capital structure exists encourages high debt levels. investment) have low free cash flow and tend to paid out as dividends. High payout reduces free cash flow. Loss of tax- where benefits of debt be risky. To avoid financial crisis in a downturn, deductibility and low free cash flow imply low debt ratios. financing are traded off against Bankruptcy costs force low debt levels. high M/B firms choose low debt ratios. the costs Implication: Trade-off theory predicts low debt ratio for all REITs, Mandatory interest payments on debt reduce To maintain capital structure at the long-term regardless of M/B ratios. The long term adjustment to optimum capital free cash flow, and mitigate agency costs; but, optimum level, firms adjust capital structure to structure holds. high debt levels induce shareholder value- changes in M/B ratio. So, no long-term maximizing managers to reject profitable relationship exists between M/B and capital investments to prevent transfer of wealth to structure. debtholders. Pecking Order: Managers Information asymmetry between shareholders High M/B firms require investment capital. To Real estate assets are difficult to value which implies REITs would always prefer issuing debt to and managers implies preference for debt over avoid issuing discounted equity, they issue debt. prefer to finance investment through debt issues, or retained earnings. avoid the potential valuation equity. This results in high debt ratios. discount associated with equity The 95% payout requirement results in low free cash flow in REITs. In issues. This theory predicts a Alternatively, high M/B firms choose low debt conjunction with discount on equity issues due to information positive relation between M/B ratios to create slack such that they can avoid asymmetry and adverse selection, low free cash flow implies REITs ratio and debt ratio, but, no issuing equity if and when they need funds in the must sell debt to raise funds, pushing debt ratios higher. long-term optimum capital future. This strategy requires access to high free structure. cash flow and retained earnings. Implication: Low free cash flow and lack of transparency of real estate assets and investments imply high debt ratios, the effect being stronger for high M/B REITs. Market Timing: Managers Information symmetry between shareholders If high M/B ratio implies low adverse selection REITs must earn 75% of their earnings from real estate activities. issue equity when cost of and managers induces adverse selection costs cost, then managers can take advantage of high Investment options for REITs are also restricted mainly to sector equity capital is low. Under in equity issues. These costs vary across time M/B ratio to time equity issues. specific assets. Finally, no single entity can own more than 50% stake. this theory, a negative relation and across firms. between M/B and debt ratio is Extreme values of M/B indicate extreme investor Restricting operations and acquisitions to the same sector denies predicted, but no optimum Extremely high expectations by irrational expectations. Managers exploit extreme managers the opportunity to acquire inter industry experience which capital structure exists. investors periodically cause equity to be valuations by issuing equity when M/B ratios are shrinks their job market. This induces managers to collude against mispriced rendering cost of equity abnormally high. hostile takeovers. Ownership restriction deters formation of low. blockholders, which weakens monitoring by board and allows managers to withhold or conceal material information. Implication: Opportunities to time equity sales are relatively scarce. 23
  • 25. Table 2 Missing Values and Sample Selection We show the number of REIT firms that are included in our study in this table. Firms are dropped out of our sample due to missing accounting and financing information during the period of our study. In second column reports the number of firms in SNL database that went IPO during 1991 to 2003. The number of firms that are included in our models that are testing the temporary impact of market-to-book on leverage ratio is listed in third column. We report the number of firms that are included in testing the long-term relationship between market-to-book and leverage ratio in fourth column. Number of firms in SNL Number of firms with information Number of firms with accounting Year database that went IPO during available to calculate the weighted information available at (t-1) 1991-2003 average of MTB ratio Panel A: Calendar Year 1992 4 2 0 1993 8 7 3 1994 33 19 7 1995 68 38 22 1996 83 41 37 1997 85 54 41 1998 90 79 41 1999 99 91 46 2000 103 95 54 2001 104 96 54 2002 106 95 53 2003 108 98 52 Panel B: IPO Year IPO+1 107 68 68 IPO+2 102 68 68 IPO+3 101 80 67 IPO+4 100 88 64 IPO+5 93 89 61 IPO+6 87 82 52 IPO+7 74 71 39 IPO+8 66 63 34 IPO+9 61 57 32 IPO+10 30 29 17 24
  • 26. Table 3: Summary Statistics of Capital structure In this table, we report the summary statistics on current leverage ratio and the changes in current leverage ratio. Book leverage is calculated as book debt to total assets. Market leverage is book debt divided by the result of total assets minus book equity plus market equity. Market equity is the product of number of share outstanding and the stock price. Net equity issues (e/At) is defined as the change in book equity minus the change in retaining earnings divided by assets. Newly retained earnings (∆RE/At) is the ratio of the result of net income minus dividend amount and total assets. We calculate the new debt issues (d/At) as the residual change in assets divided by assets. Book Leverage % Market Leverage d/At % e/At % ∆RE / At % % Year N Mean S.D. Mean S.D. Mean S.D. Mean S.D. Mean S.D. Panel A: IPO Year IPO+1 68 51.63 18.66 46.54 18.60 16.15 17.24 11.45 16.53 -1.08 2.68 IPO+2 68 55.18 18.51 50.39 19.57 14.39 14.46 8.87 13.73 -1.12 3.38 IPO+3 80 56.28 17.00 50.10 18.29 13.60 12.35 8.56 11.25 -0.72 2.75 IPO+4 88 59.22 18.80 52.79 17.55 12.69 16.57 5.93 16.86 -0.88 2.91 IPO+5 89 62.37 17.42 56.54 16.53 9.14 14.79 4.45 10.39 -0.60 4.48 IPO+6 82 65.34 17.13 59.91 16.81 5.28 15.13 0.87 7.62 0.17 3.43 IPO+7 71 65.72 18.90 60.15 17.40 3.30 9.97 1.45 12.26 -0.90 2.74 IPO+8 63 66.09 16.94 59.86 16.57 0.86 17.56 2.36 11.03 -0.71 2.24 IPO+9 57 66.11 16.80 56.81 16.30 3.00 9.13 1.57 5.19 -0.86 1.79 IPO+10 29 65.58 17.48 53.38 16.23 5.14 12.60 2.24 7.13 -1.40 3.95 Panel B: Calendar Year 1994 19 52.01 26.50 43.60 22.40 13.79 14.43 11.91 18.66 -2.03 1.74 1995 38 50.19 21.14 42.10 18.53 10.06 12.21 10.35 16.11 -1.98 1.68 1996 41 51.50 18.17 40.86 17.80 12.12 11.06 14.16 14.14 -1.22 1.88 1997 54 55.12 17.41 44.49 16.07 18.65 12.85 15.10 13.35 -0.90 1.62 1998 79 59.76 15.90 56.23 14.90 24.43 16.24 9.39 18.36 -0.31 2.15 1999 91 61.87 15.01 61.63 14.23 8.27 11.15 1.58 5.90 0.03 2.94 2000 95 62.49 16.76 60.82 16.63 3.00 11.25 -0.25 5.11 -0.23 4.52 2001 96 64.21 17.25 58.38 16.96 3.50 11.42 0.69 8.06 -0.64 2.66 2002 95 65.44 18.91 58.98 16.86 3.78 10.71 1.08 7.29 -0.85 3.61 2003 98 64.65 18.90 52.27 16.88 2.19 17.70 4.21 12.50 -1.05 3.66 25
  • 27. Table 4: Correlation between Leverage and Past Market to Book Ratio In this table, we present correlations between leverage ratio and past market-to-book ratios. Book leverage is calculated as book debt to total assets. Market leverage is book debt divided by the result of total assets minus book equity plus market equity. Market equity is the product of number of share outstanding and the stock price. Market-to-book is defined as total assets minus book equity plus market equity then divided by total assets. We include all firms. The numbers in parentheses contain multiple observations on the same firm from different calendar years for which past values of market-to-book ratio are available in SNL database. Book Market MTB MTB MTB MTB MTB MTB MTB MTB MTB MTB Leverage Leverage t-1 t-2 t-3 t-4 t-5 t-6 t-7 t-8 t-9 t-10 Book 1.00 0.73*** 0.23*** 0.25*** 0.23*** 0.26*** 0.23*** 0.21*** 0.18*** 0.20** 0.24** 0.26 Leverage (715) (713) (715) (641) (567) (485) (396) (308) (225) (154) (93) (39) Market 1.00 -0.35*** -0.25*** -0.18 *** -0.15*** -0.17*** -0.18*** -0.07 -0.03 0.09 0.04 Leverage (713) (713) (639) (565) (483) (394) (306) (223) (152) (92) (39) MTB t-1 1.00 0.84*** 0.66*** 0.59*** 0.64*** 0.58*** 0.33*** 0.31*** 0.33*** 0.35** (715) (641) (567) (485) (396) (308) (225) (154) (93) (39) MTB t-2 1.00 0.81*** 0.65*** 0.56*** 0.60*** 0.40*** 0.33*** 0.33*** 0.42*** (641) (566) (484) (395) (308) (225) (154) (93) (39) MTB t-3 1.00 0.83*** 0.61*** 0.45*** 0.44*** 0.40*** 0.32*** 0.44*** (567) (484) (395) (307) (225) (154) (93) (39) MTB t-4 1.00 0.81*** 0.53*** 0.39*** 0.52*** 0.42*** 0.31* (485) (395) (307) (224) (154) (93) (39) MTB t-5 1.00 0.74*** 0.48*** 0.55*** 0.59*** 0.31* (396) (307) (224) (153) (93) (39) MTB t-6 1.00 0.81*** 0.68*** 0.64*** 0.56*** (308) (225) (154) (93) (39) MTB t-7 1.00 0.79*** 0.64*** 0.66*** (225) (154) (93) (39) MTB t-8 1.00 0.82*** 0.75*** (154) (93) (39) MTB t-9 1.00 0.84*** (93) (39) MTB t- 1.00 10 (39) 26
  • 28. Table 5: Determinants of Annual Changes in Leverage and Components We investigate the impact of market-to-book on temporary change in leverage ratio in table 4. The dependent variable in Panel A is annual change in book leverage. Besides the market-to-book ratio, we also add percentage of real estate investment to total assets as proxy for asset tangibility, EBITDA to total assets as proxy for profitability and logarithm of total revenue as proxy of firm size. These variables are proven to be connected with leverage ratio in Rajan and Zingales (1995). We run this model for each IPO year as well as for all firms in SNL database between 1991 and 2003. We further decompose the change in leverage ratio into equity issues, retained earnings, and the residual change in leverage, which depends on the total growth in assets from the combination of equity issues, debt issues, and newly retained earnings. We run the same models for each component and reported the results in Panel B, C and D. (M/B)t-1 (Reinvestment/A)t-1 (EBITDA/A)t-1 Ln (Revenue ) t-1 Year N B t(b) c t(c) D t(d) e t(e) R-sqr Panel A: Change in book leverage % IPO+1 68 -2.65 -0.58 -0.23 -1.46 -0.07 -0.15 -1.60 -1.46 31.02 IPO+2 68 0.61 0.11 -0.18 -1.60 -0.34 -0.48 0.63 0.62 17.61 IPO+3 80 -2.81 -0.78 -0.13 -1.31 0.03 0.07 -0.59 -0.94 25.65 IPO+4 88 14.06 2.40** -0.34 -2.61** -0.71 -1.40 0.72 0.68 21.71 IPO+5 89 8.05 2.61** 0.06 0.68 -0.13 -0.36 -0.48 -0.68 13.20 IPO+6 82 6.57 2.56** -0.13 -1.99** -0.46 -2.80*** 0.00 0.01 18.67 IPO+7 71 2.62 0.85 -0.33 -2.77*** -0.75 -3.16*** -0.57 -1.13 30.88 IPO+8 63 -3.63 -0.93 0.17 1.00 0.58 2.48** 2.43 4.05*** 50.70 IPO+9 57 0.68 0.20 -0.15 -0.95 -0.08 -0.25 1.06 1.69* 0.00 IPO+10 29 -1.34 -0.18 0.60 1.73* -0.19 -0.26 -0.45 -0.27 6.48 All firms 715 2.41 1.85 * -0.11 -3.07*** -0.13 -1.21 0.07 0.28 14.97 Panel B: Change in Book Leverage Due to Net Equity Issues % IPO+1 68 -10.97 -1.73* -0.25 -1.17 0.34 0.50 0.58 0.38 1.13 IPO+2 68 -11.15 -1.67* -0.26 -1.99* 0.21 0.36 2.03 1.67* 12.49 IPO+3 80 -17.30 -3.40*** -0.14 -1.01 1.93 3.60*** -0.26 -0.29 13.43 IPO+4 88 4.42 0.57 -0.29 -1.65 0.28 0.41 0.88 0.62 1.73 IPO+5 89 -1.48 -0.41 -0.23 -2.33** 0.94 2.27** 1.75 2.11** 11.33 IPO+6 82 1.70 0.55 -0.26 -3.42*** -0.16 -0.79 2.19 3.84*** 30.97 IPO+7 71 -23.73 -4.23*** -0.45 -2.09** 0.05 0.11 2.04 2.22** 40.21 IPO+8 63 -15.19 -3.19*** -0.01 -0.07 1.45 5.05*** 2.97 4.06*** 61.88 IPO+9 57 -8.23 -2.28** -0.26 -1.58 0.11 0.33 0.71 1.05 9.94 IPO+10 29 -3.71 -0.54 -0.05 -0.15 -0.46 -0.70 0.85 0.54 0.00 All firms 715 -8.66 -5.15*** -0.23 -4.80*** 0.54 3.84*** 1.88 5.78*** 12.77 Panel C: Change in Book Leverage Due to Newly Retained Earnings % IPO+1 68 -1.64 -1.89* 0.06 1.90* -0.05 -0.55 -0.47 -2.30** 29.70 IPO+2 68 -3.71 -2.43** -0.03 -0.86 -0.18 -1.34 -0.73 -2.63** 24.67 IPO+3 80 1.51 1.39 0.05 1.58 -0.61 -5.30*** -0.24 -1.26 33.90 IPO+4 88 -0.34 -0.26 -0.07 -2.29** -0.28 -2.47** -0.34 -1.46 10.61 IPO+5 89 -2.49 -1.84* 0.08 2.25** -0.55 -3.52*** -0.98 -3.14*** 32.88 IPO+6 82 -1.87 -1.99* 0.10 4.11*** -0.39 -6.49*** -0.37 -2.16** 68.50 IPO+7 71 0.65 0.45 -0.04 -0.66 -0.29 -2.62** -0.38 -1.63 21.24 IPO+8 63 2.01 1.59 -0.05 -0.91 -0.25 3.29*** -0.19 -0.96 34.84 IPO+9 57 0.39 0.31 0.11 1.81* -0.19 -1.61 -0.23 -0.96 6.11 IPO+10 29 -0.36 -0.09 -0.12 -0.65 -0.39 -1.05 -0.59 -0.68 0.00 All firms 715 -1.82 -4.64*** 0.03 2.80*** -0.25 -7.79*** -0.39 -5.14*** 22.90 Panel D: Change in Book Leverage Due to Growth in Assets % IPO+1 68 9.96 2.07** -0.03 -0.21 -0.36 -0.70 -1.71 -1.50 42.83 IPO+2 68 15.48 2.74*** 0.11 1.00 -0.38 -0.76 -0.67 -0.65 31.87 IPO+3 80 12.99 2.89*** -0.03 -0.28 -1.30 -2.73*** -0.09 -0.12 26.84 IPO+4 88 9.97 2.62** 0.01 0.12 -0.72 -2.17** 0.18 0.26 13.39 IPO+5 89 12.02 3.94*** 0.21 2.44** -0.52 -1.49 -1.25 -1.78* 28.76 IPO+6 82 6.74 2.11** 0.04 0.49 0.09 0.43 -1.81 -3.07*** 23.19 IPO+7 71 25.70 4.86*** 0.16 0.79 -0.51 -1.24 -2.23 -2.57** 42.70 IPO+8 63 9.55 3.35*** 0.23 1.89* -0.62 -3.58*** -0.35 -0.79 28.15 IPO+9 57 8.51 3.24*** 0.01 0.07 0.00 0.01 0.58 1.18 18.73 IPO+10 29 2.82 0.57 0.77 3.36*** 0.67 1.43 -0.70 -0.64 33.58 All firms 715 12.88 10.01*** 0.08 2.32** -0.41 -3.86*** -1.42 -5.70*** 35.46 27
  • 29. Table 6: Determinants of Leverage We investigate the relationship between market-to-book and leverage ratio in table 5. Penal A, we follow Rajan and Zingales (1995) and use percentage of real estate investment, EBITDA to total assets and logarithm of total revenue as control variables. In panel B, we add the weighted average market-to-book ratio which is proposed by Baker and Wurgler (2002) to capture the long-term effect of market-to-book on leverage ratios. We run this model for each IPO year as well as for all firms in SNL database between 1991 and 2003. In Panel B, we do not include the weighted average market-to-book in IPO+1 and IPO+2 regression due to the high correlation between the current market-to-book and weighted average market-to- book. (M/B)efwa,t-1 (M/B)t-1 (Reinvestment/A)t-1 (EBITDA/A)t-1 Ln (Revenue ) t-1 R-sqr % Year N b t(b) C t(c) D t(d) E t(e) f t(f) Panel A: Without Weighted Average Market-to-book IPO+1 68 5.54 0.81 -0.38 -1.60 0.06 0.07 0.67 0.42 5.52 IPO+2 68 4.83 0.51 -0.17 -0.90 0.47 0.58 2.47 1.46 4.13 IPO+3 80 -12.00 -1.50 -0.19 -0.86 1.62 1.96* 1.78 1.30 4.53 IPO+4 88 12.77 1.57 -0.39 -2.12 ** 0.85 1.27 2.84 1.97 * 13.40 IPO+5 89 13.09 2.31** -0.18 -1.14 1.21 1.92* 0.90 0.69 21.02 IPO+6 82 28.00 4.19*** -0.03 -0.15 -0.50 -1.08 0.23 0.17 26.33 IPO+7 71 6.82 0.60 -0.24 -0.55 -1.11 -1.27 0.90 0.49 0.00 IPO+8 63 28.24 2.71*** -0.67 -1.43 -0.58 -0.87 1.26 0.73 8.30 IPO+9 57 18.37 1.59 0.05 0.08 0.97 0.91 1.67 0.76 7.39 IPO+10 29 26.36 1.96* 1.06 1.55 -0.19 -0.14 -0.48 -0.15 23.18 All firms 715 9.58 3.85*** -0.17 -2.45** 0.48 2.31** 2.30 4.85*** 10.53 Panel B: With Weighted Average Market-to-book IPO+1 68 5.54 0.81 -0.38 -1.60 0.06 0.07 0.67 0.42 5.52 IPO+2 68 4.83 0.51 -0.17 -0.90 0.47 0.58 2.47 1.46 4.13 IPO+3 67 11.47 3.99*** -23.67 -2.76*** 0.07 0.30 2.38 2.78*** 2.37 1.44 23.11 IPO+4 64 4.16 2.62** -3.68 -0.43 -0.58 -1.73* 0.59 0.71 3.87 2.06** 29.84 IPO+5 61 1.29 0.51 3.83 0.36 -0.28 -1.14 1.52 1.76* 1.02 0.64 25.57 IPO+6 52 12.95 4.24*** -12.48 -1.33 -0.10 -0.47 -0.74 -1.06 -2.80 -1.99* 55.65 IPO+7 39 36.81 3.75*** -25.70 -2.10** 0.35 0.57 -1.11 -1.25 -2.72 -1.41 25.30 IPO+8 34 34.28 3.25*** -19.46 -1.27 0.62 0.85 -0.01 -0.01 -0.94 -0.40 17.43 IPO+9 32 38.88 3.45*** -19.75 -1.42 1.00 1.41 0.04 0.03 -0.14 -0.06 21.30 IPO+10 17 38.41 2.83** -9.99 -0.62 1.74 2.56** -0.40 -0.20 2.81 0.72 37.24 All firms 410 3.90 1.32*** -6.88 -1.89* -0.20 -2.11** 1.19 4.15*** 2.48 3.87*** 16.92 28