Corporate board vigilance and insolvency risk: a mediated moderation model of debt maturity and fixed collaterals

Studies indicate that a consistent rise in insolvency risk should be addressed at the strategic level. Vigilant boards can use leverage maturity structure as a tool to control insolvency risk. However, according to the information asymmetry theory, leverage acquisition is subject to the presence of...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inInternational Journal of Management and Economics Vol. 57; no. 1; pp. 14 - 33
Main Authors Yassir Hussain, Rana, Xuezhou, Wen, Hussain, Haroon, Saad, Muhammad, Qalati, Sikander Ali
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Sciendo 01.03.2021
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Summary:Studies indicate that a consistent rise in insolvency risk should be addressed at the strategic level. Vigilant boards can use leverage maturity structure as a tool to control insolvency risk. However, according to the information asymmetry theory, leverage acquisition is subject to the presence of fixed assets which can be used as collateral. The current study focuses on the relationship between board vigilance and insolvency risk, mediated by debt maturity and moderated by fixed collaterals in Pakistan based non-financial firms. A data set of 284 firms is constructed between the years 2013 and 2017. Hierarchical multiple regression analysis is used to test the proposed hypothesis using ordinary least squares (OLS) and panel corrected standard errors (PCSE) regression estimators. The results indicate that debt maturity mediates the relationship between board vigilance and insolvency risk. New information is generated about the fixed collaterals, and these negatively moderate the relationship between leverage maturity and emerging market z-score indicating inefficiency in the usage of fixed assets as collaterals. These results are robust to both regression techniques confirming that the non-productive fixed collaterals overshadow the positives of tangible assets in asset structure.
ISSN:2543-5361
2543-5361
DOI:10.2478/ijme-2020-0032