Abstract
We examine the stock return implications of corporate-defined benefit pension plans in innovative U.S. firms and in R & D- and patent-sorted portfolio specifications. We find that investors underreact to firms increasing off-balance-sheet liabilities. Pensions represent material off-balance-sheet liabilities: in our extensive and large sample (1985-2017, 2541 firms for 26,522 observations), entities with pension plans are 38% more levered when we integrate pension liabilities and assets into the firms' capital structure. We find that R & D-intensive firms increasing the size of their pension liability subsequently underperform their benchmark returns. Through six alternative R & D-market capitalization portfolios, we also find that this association is stronger for smaller firms. Finally, the relationship remains persistent over a long horizon. These findings are robust to endogeneity concerns addressed through instrumental variables, propensity score matching, and Heckman correction.
Author supplied keywords
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Kabir Hassan, M., Sydul Karim, M., Dreassi, A., & Paltrinieri, A. (2023). HOW CORPORATE PENSIONS AFFECT STOCK RETURNS: THE ROLE OF R&D EXPENDITURES. Journal of Financial Management, Markets and Institutions, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1142/S2282717X23500020
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.