Corporate Investment Decision Practices and the Hurdle Rate Premium Puzzle

We survey a cross-section of 127 companies to gain insight on various dimensions of firms' investment decisions. The questions posed by our survey address the hurdle rates firms use, calculations of project-related cashflows, and the interaction of cashflows and hurdle rates. Unlike previous studies which examine investment decisions by either using survey data or data obtained from financial tapes, we use both sets of data. This approach produced one of our primary findings that there is a hurdle rate premium puzzle, in that hurdle rates used by our sample of firms exceed their cost of capital, that we calculate using Compustat data, by a substantial magnitude. We investigate the determinants of this puzzle and find that it is related to factors that reflect financial flexibility considerations, managers' confidence in the estimates of beta, financial health of firms, and the past performance of the industry they are in. Finally, our findings show that survey firms do not always appear to handle the cashflow dimension of their investment decisions in a consistent manner.

[1]  David F. Scott,et al.  The Capital Expenditure Decision-Making Process of Large Corporations , 1975 .

[2]  Lawrence J. Gitman,et al.  A Survey of Capital Budgeting Techniques Used by Major U.S. Firms , 1977 .

[3]  Robert S. Chirinko,et al.  Testing static tradeoff against pecking order models of capital structure: a critical comment , 2000 .

[4]  Lawrence J. Gitman,et al.  Bridging the theory-practice gap in corporate finance: A survey of chief financial officers , 1995 .

[5]  Thomas P. Klammer,et al.  The Continuing Increase in the Use of Sophisticated Capital Budgeting Techniques , 1984 .

[6]  Harold Bierman,et al.  Capital Budgeting in 1992: A Survey , 1993 .

[7]  S. Wadhwani The US stock market and the global economic crisis , 1999, National Institute Economic Review.

[8]  James C. T. Mao,et al.  SURVEY OF CAPITAL BUDGETING: THEORY AND PRACTICE , 1970 .

[9]  S. Kaplan,et al.  Do Investment-Cash Flow Sensitivities Provide Useful Measures of Financing Constraints? , 1997 .

[10]  D. Morgan Focus groups for qualitative research. , 1988, Hospital guest relations report.

[11]  Keith H. Black Testing Trade-Off and Pecking Order Predictions about Dividends and Debt , 2002 .

[12]  Stewart C. Myers,et al.  Testing static tradeoff against pecking order models of capital structure 1 , 1999 .

[13]  Campbell R. Harvey,et al.  The Long-Run Equity Risk Premium , 2006 .

[14]  E. Fama,et al.  The Equity Premium , 2001 .

[15]  Dirk Brounen,et al.  Corporate Finance in Europe: Confronting Theory with Practice , 2004 .

[16]  Lawrence H. Summers,et al.  A CEO Survey of U.S. Companies' Time Horizons and Hurdle Rates , 1995 .

[17]  Nick Antill,et al.  Creating Value In The Oil Industry , 2004 .

[18]  Niki Saabye The Equity Risk Premium , 2003 .

[19]  N. Barberis,et al.  Mental Accounting, Loss Aversion, and Individual Stock Returns , 2001 .

[20]  B. Malkiel,et al.  Idiosyncratic Risk and Security Returns , 2004 .

[21]  Donald F. Istvan The Economic Evaluation of Capital Expenditures , 1961 .

[22]  Floyd J. Fowler,et al.  Survey Research Methods , 1984 .

[23]  Olivier J. Blanchard,et al.  Movements in the Equity Premium , 1993 .

[24]  Gary L. Sundem,et al.  SURVEY AND ANALYSIS OF CAPITAL BUDGETING METHODS , 1978 .

[25]  W. Sean Cleary,et al.  The Relationship between Firm Investment and Financial Status , 1999 .

[26]  Joshua D. Rauh Investment and Financing Constraints: Evidence from the Funding of Corporate Pension Plans , 2006 .

[27]  E. Singer,et al.  Survey research methods: A reader. , 1990 .

[28]  Lawrence J. Gitman,et al.  Cost of Capital Techniques Used by Major U.S. Firms: Survey and Analysis of Fortune's 1000 , 1982 .

[29]  Campbell R. Harvey,et al.  The Theory and Practice of Corporate Finance: Evidence from the Field , 1999 .

[30]  Murray Z. Frank,et al.  Testing the Pecking Order Theory of Capital Structure , 2000 .

[31]  Glenn H. Petry Effective use of capital budgeting tools , 1975 .

[32]  T. Klammer,et al.  Empirical Evidence of the Adoption of Sophisticated Capital Budgeting Techniques , 1972 .

[33]  Ellen R. McGrattan,et al.  The Declining U.S. Equity Premium , 2000 .

[34]  Myron S. Scholes,et al.  Estimating betas from nonsynchronous data , 1977 .

[35]  Ann Taket Survey Research Methods: A Reader , 1990 .

[36]  F. Modigliani,et al.  CORPORATE INCOME TAXES AND THE COST OF CAPITAL: A CORRECTION , 1963 .

[37]  Kenneth M. Eades,et al.  Best Practices in Estimating the Cost of Capital: Survey and Synthesis , 1998 .

[38]  E. Dimson Risk measurement when shares are subject to infrequent trading , 1979 .

[39]  Ivo Welch,et al.  Views of Financial Economists on the Equity Premium and on Professional Controversies , 1999 .

[40]  P. Santa-clara,et al.  Idiosyncratic Risk Matters! , 2002 .

[41]  Financing Constraints and Corporate Investment , 1988 .

[42]  Eugene F. Brigham,et al.  Hurdle Rates for Screening Capital Expenditure Proposals , 1975 .

[43]  René M. Stulz,et al.  The Determinants and Implications of Corporate Cash Holdings , 1997 .

[44]  Alan K. Reichert,et al.  AN ANALYSIS OF THE FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT TECHNIQUES CURRENTLY EMPLOYED BY LARGE U.S. CORPORATIONS , 1983 .

[45]  Ravi Jagannathan,et al.  Do We Need CAPM for Capital Budgeting? , 2002 .