Authors
Jongmoo Jay Choi, Connie X Mao, Arun D Upadhyay
Publication date
2013/1
Journal
Journal of Business Finance & Accounting
Volume
40
Issue
1-2
Pages
239-271
Description
This paper examines the financial and operational hedging activities of US pharmaceutical and biotech firms that are subject to a high level of information asymmetry stemming from R&D investments during 2001–2006. We find evidence in support of the information asymmetry hypothesis à la Froot, Scharfstein and Stein (1993) that hedging helps mitigate the under‐investment problem. Specifically, we find that the use of financial derivatives is associated with greater firm value and that the value enhancement is larger for firms subject to greater information asymmetry and better growth opportunities. There is a synergy between financial hedging and operational hedging where the latter is used to counter product development risk. The results are robust with respect to alternative performance measures, industry‐specific growth measures, and the endogeneity problem. Our work is differentiated from existing studies …
Total citations
20132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202415471098615946
Scholar articles
JJ Choi, CX Mao, AD Upadhyay - Journal of Business Finance & Accounting, 2013