Record Details

Cash Management in Nepalese Manufacturing Enterprises

The Journal of Development and Administrative Studies

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Field Value
 
Title Cash Management in Nepalese Manufacturing Enterprises
 
Creator Sharma, Dilli Raj; Associate Professor, Central Department of Management, Kirtipur, Tribhuvan University
 
Subject Management
Cash management, dividend payment, liquidity assets, and investment opportunities
 
Description A firm that requires external financing can rely on either debt or equity, but both have an asymmetric information problem which may prevent obtaining financing. In the case of debt financing, the higher the level of informational asymmetry between the firm and the lender, the more difficult it will be for the lender to ascertain the firm's credit quality. In some cases, identifying a firm's quality may be so difficult that the lender may simply ration credit. Because of this asymmetry in lending and the possibility of credit rationing by banks, firms may decide to hold high levels of cash so they can take advantage of positive net present value (NPV) projects even when credit is tight. However, if a firm holds cash, it should not need as much bank financing as it otherwise would. Thus the bank may incur a cost by encouraging cash holdings, namely the loss of potential loans to those firms. Hence, Cash management is the process whereby the cash inflows and outflows are controlled so that current obligations will be met in time and any excess cash will earn income. Specifically, it aims at determining the level of cash holdings by Nepalese manufacturing enterprises. With this in mind, samples of Nepalese manufacturing firms have been used to conduct a study with secondary data. First, regression model is used to test for the existence of an optimal cash holding in this study. The study based on twelve manufacturing enterprises covering the period 1999-2012. The study is reveals that cash holdings are positively affected by the investment opportunity set and cash flows while negatively affected by asset’s liquidity, interest rate, leverage and size in Nepalese manufacturing enterprises.The Journal of Development and Administrative Studies, Vol. 22, No. 1-2, pp. 1-14, 2014
 
Publisher Centre for Economic Development and Administration (CEDA)
 
Contributor
 
Date 2015-09-22
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Peer-reviewed Article

 
Format application/pdf
 
Identifier http://www.nepjol.info/index.php/JODAS/article/view/13460
10.3126/jodas.v22i1-2.13460
 
Source Journal of Development and Administrative Studies; Vol 22, No 1-2 (2014); 1-14
2091-0339
 
Language eng
 
Relation http://www.nepjol.info/index.php/JODAS/article/view/13460/10829
 
Coverage Nepal


 
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