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Overconfident Managers and External Financing Choice

Masaya Ishikawa (Graduate School of Commerce and Management, Hitotsubashi University, Japan)
Hidetomo Takahashi (Graduate School of Commerce and Management, Hitotsubashi University, Japan)

Review of Behavioral Finance

ISSN: 1940-5979

Article publication date: 21 April 2010

2175

Abstract

This study examines the relationship between managerial overconfidence and corporate financing decisions by constructing proxies for managerial overconfidence based on the track records of earnings forecasts in Japanese listed firms. We find that managers have the stable tendency to forecast overly upward earnings compared to actual ones and that their upward bias decreases the probability of issuing equity in the public market by about 4.7 percent per one standard error, which economically has the strongest impact on financing decisions. This tendency is observed when we employ alternative measures for managerial overconfidence and other model specifications. However, in private placements, the choice to offer equity is not always avoided by managers. This implies that managers place private equity with the expectation of the certification effect

Keywords

Citation

Ishikawa, M. and Takahashi, H. (2010), "Overconfident Managers and External Financing Choice", Review of Behavioral Finance, Vol. 2 No. 1, pp. 37-58. https://doi.org/10.1108/19405979201000003

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2010, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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