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Article
Which Investments Do Firms Protect? Liquidity Management and Real Adjustments When Access to Finance Falls Sharply
Journal of Financial Intermediation
  • James R. Brown, Iowa State University
  • Bruce C. Petersen, Washington University in St. Louis
Document Type
Article
Publication Version
Accepted Manuscript
Publication Date
7-1-2014
DOI
10.2139/ssrn.2465404
Abstract
We study how firms engaged in both R&D and fixed investment manage liquidity and adjust real investment during the recent financial crisis. Among firms with positive R&D expenditures, cuts to fixed investment in the crisis are typically far more severe than cuts to R&D. These firms allocate cash reserves to buffer R&D but do not use cash to protect fixed investment. Some firms appear to go so far as to allow the stock of fixed assets to fall to stabilize R&D. The use of cash holdings and fixed assets to protect R&D is particularly strong among firms most likely to face financing frictions at the start of the crisis. We only find evidence that firms use cash to buffer fixed investment when we expand the sample to include firms with no R&D spending to compete for funds. Our study provides direct evidence on the real effects of liquidity management, highlights a key benefit of precautionary cash reserves, and illustrates the adjustments firms make to navigate a financial crisis.
Comments

This is an accepted manuscript of an article from Brown, James R. and Petersen, Bruce C., Which Investments Do Firms Protect? Liquidity Management and Real Adjustments When Access to Finance Falls Sharply (July 3, 2014). Doi: 10.2139/ssrn.2465404. Posted with permission.

Copyright Owner
Elsevier B.V.
Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
James R. Brown and Bruce C. Petersen. "Which Investments Do Firms Protect? Liquidity Management and Real Adjustments When Access to Finance Falls Sharply" Journal of Financial Intermediation Vol. 24 Iss. 4 (2014) p. 441 - 465
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/james-brown/14/