Abstract
We investigate the relationship between firms’ cash holdings and pandemics. Our results show that compared to tele-workable firms, whose employees can work remotely, non-tele-workable firms with more on-site employees increase cash during pandemics. This increase in cash comes from short-debt, preferred stocks, reduction in capital expenditures, discontinuation of some operations and lower tax payments. Firms hold more cash as a reaction to higher default risk. For non-tele-workable firms, there is a positive relationship between abnormal stock returns and cash, suggesting that this increase in cash during pandemics is not driven by behavioral reasons but by increases in uncertainty in labor productivity.
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CITATION STYLE
Baxamusa, M., & Jalal, A. (2023). Pandemics and cash. Journal of Business Finance and Accounting, 50(7–8), 1467–1501. https://doi.org/10.1111/jbfa.12657
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