Purpose- This study aims to investigate the possible relationship between market value added (MVA) and economic value-added momentum (EVAM). Besides, any possible linkage between leverage (in terms of the degree of combined leverage) and market value added is also tested.
Methodology- This study conducts a time series analysis to the quarterly data of manufacturing industry, comprising Borsa Istanbul (BIST) listed manufacturing firms for the period of 2001.q2-2022.q4 to test MVA-EVAM relationship. It employs autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) bounds testing approach, developed firstly by Pesaran and Shin (1999) and further revised by Pesaran, Smith and Shin (2001). The stationarity of the series is tested by the Augmented Dickey-Fuller (ADF) and Phillips and Perron (PP) unit root tests.
Findings- Empirical findings from ARDL bounds testing approach refers the existence of long-run relationships between market value added and economic value added momentum; and market value added and degree of total leverage. The coefficients of the long-run form of ARDL model reveal that both economic value-added momentum and degree of combined leverage have statistically significant and negative effects on market value added. The estimated short-run coefficients indicate that economic value added momentum has significantly negative effect on market value added created as similar to the long-run finding. Another finding is that though leverage has significantly positive effect on market value added in the short-run, this positive effect turns out to be negative in lag one period.
Conclusion- This study contributes to the literature on MVA-EVA relationship by employing autoregressive ARDL bounds testing approach to manufacturing industry comprising Borsa Istanbul (BIST) listed manufacturing firms of Turkey as an emerging market. Besides, the research model includes EVAM -as an independent variable- that is so rarely considered in existing literature.
Market value-added economic value-added momentum leverage time series analysis ARDL bounds testing approach
Primary Language | English |
---|---|
Subjects | Business Administration |
Journal Section | Articles |
Authors | |
Publication Date | June 30, 2023 |
Published in Issue | Year 2023 Volume: 10 Issue: 2 |
Journal of Economics, Finance and Accounting (JEFA) is a scientific, academic, double blind peer-reviewed, quarterly and open-access online journal. The journal publishes four issues a year. The issuing months are March, June, September and December. The publication languages of the Journal are English and Turkish. JEFA aims to provide a research source for all practitioners, policy makers, professionals and researchers working in the area of economics, finance, accounting and auditing. The editor in chief of JEFA invites all manuscripts that cover theoretical and/or applied researches on topics related to the interest areas of the Journal. JEFA publishes academic research studies only. JEFA charges no submission or publication fee.
Ethics Policy - JEFA applies the standards of Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE). JEFA is committed to the academic community ensuring ethics and quality of manuscripts in publications. Plagiarism is strictly forbidden and the manuscripts found to be plagiarized will not be accepted or if published will be removed from the publication. Authors must certify that their manuscripts are their original work. Plagiarism, duplicate, data fabrication and redundant publications are forbidden. The manuscripts are subject to plagiarism check by iThenticate or similar. All manuscript submissions must provide a similarity report (up to 15% excluding quotes, bibliography, abstract and method).
Open Access - All research articles published in PressAcademia Journals are fully open access; immediately freely available to read, download and share. Articles are published under the terms of a Creative Commons license which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Open access is a property of individual works, not necessarily journals or publishers. Community standards, rather than copyright law, will continue to provide the mechanism for enforcement of proper attribution and responsible use of the published work, as they do now.