This study examines the relations between leverage and investment in
China’s listed firms, where corporate debt is principally provided by stateowned
banks. We obtain three major findings. First, there is a negative
relation between leverage and investment. Second, the negative relation
between leverage and investment is weaker in firms with low growth
opportunities and poor operating performance than in firms with high
growth opportunities and good operating performance. Third, the negative
relation between leverage and investment is weaker in firms with a higher
level of state shareholding than in firms with a lower level of state
shareholding. Overall, our results are consistent with the hypothesis that the
state-owned banks in China impose fewer restrictions on the capital
expenditures of low growth and poorly performing firms and also firms
with greater state ownership. This creates an over-investment bias in these
firms.
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