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COST DYNAMICS OF SEOS: EXPLORING THE INFLUENCE OF CORPORATE OWNERSHIP STRUCTURE

Ahmed Khalid Al-Farsi·Sara Maria Lopez
Published 02 July 2024
Vol. 1, No. 1 (2024)
pp. 15-21
CC BY 4.0
  1. 1
    Ahmed Khalid Al-Farsi
    Masdar Institute of Science and Technology, Abu Dhabi, UAE
    AE
  2. 2
    Sara Maria Lopez
    Department of Finance, School of Business Administration, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, USA
    US

Companies face significant stock price drops, typically ranging from two to three percent, upon announcing seasoned equity offerings (SEOs), as evidenced in various studies (Asquith & Mullins, 1986; Masulis, 1986; Smith, 1986; Jung, Kim, & Stulz, 1996). Smith (1986) further reveals that the market's reaction to equity issuance on the announcement day is approximately 2.88 percent more negative compared to debt issuance. Bayless (1994) supports these findings, suggesting that the issue costs for equity can be 35.4 to 48.6 percent higher than similar debt issues, using the Asquith-Mullin (1986) measure. Lee, Lochhead, Ritter, and Zhao (1996) reinforce the notion of equity financing's elevated costs by reporting that the total direct costs of SEOs average 7.11 percent of total proceeds, while debt issues only represent 2.24 percent. These empirical results collectively highlight that, in general, equity financing is both costly and more expensive than debt financing, making debt a seemingly more attractive option. Nonetheless, individual firms may opt for equity issuances due to other motivating factors.

JournalInsurance and Financial Risk Journal
ISSN3065-0313
Volume / IssueVol. 1, No. 1 (2024)
Pages15-21
Published02 July 2024
Access Open Access
LicenseCC BY 4.0 — reuse with attribution
PublisherKeith Publications
Al-Farsi , A., Lopez, S. (2024). COST DYNAMICS OF SEOS: EXPLORING THE INFLUENCE OF CORPORATE OWNERSHIP STRUCTURE . Insurance and Financial Risk Journal, Vol. 1 No. 1, pp. 15-21

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