Determinants of capital structure: evidence from Jordanian service companies
This paper examines capital structure determinants for service companies in Jordan
between 2014 and 2018. Secondary data from 45 companies were analyzed using the
panel regression approach. The results show that the independent variables, suggested
as capital structure determinants, have an effect on the debt ratio made by the service
companies. Size and non-debt tax shield have a positive significant effect on the debt
ratio, while profitability and business risk have a negative significant impact on the
debt ratio. In general, the findings support the notion that the trade-off, bankruptcy
cost, agency cost and pecking order theories are crucial in explaining the capital structure
of Jordanian service companies except for non-debt tax shields and tangibility
factors. Jordanian service companies do not use fixed assets as collateral or companies
with higher collateral value tend to borrow less debt. Although the coefficient of institutional
investors is statistically insignificant, it is still negative and economically significant.
This paper concludes that size, profitability, business risk, non-debt tax shields
and institutional ownership factors are fundamental in terms of shaping the capital
structure in Jordanian service companies.