This paper studies the determinants of cash holdings and the marginal value of
cash in China’s share-issued privatized firms from 1994 – 2007. We first analyze the
effects of firm characteristics on corporate cash holdings and find empirical evidence that
is largely consistent with U.S. and other international evidence in previous studies.
Specifically, we find that smaller, more profitable and high growth firms hold more cash.
Debt and net working capital are negatively related to cash holdings, suggesting that debt
and working capital may be treated as cash substitutes. We also find that state ownership
is negatively related to cash holdings. Firms with high state ownership are less
financially constrained in that they have better access to credit in the mostly state-owned
bank lending environment. We further examine the cross-sectional variations in the
marginal value of corporate cash holdings. We find that the marginal value of cash
declines with higher level of cash and higher level of debt, consistent with evidence in
U.S. firms. Our most important finding is that the marginal value of cash declines as the
equity ownership retained by the state increases. For the average firm in our sample, the
value of an additional dollar is $0.94. An additional dollar is valued $0.33-$0.47 higher
in firms with zero percent state ownership than in firms with 50 percent or higher state
ownership. This difference is both statistically and economically significant.
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