Peer effects as a determinant of the speculative motive – A component of cash holdings
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1590/1808-057x20262335.enKeywords:
peer effect, speculative model, cash holdingResumen
The objective of this research was to investigate whether peers' investment decision specifically sectoral capital expenditures (CAPEX) influence corporate cash holdings, and to assess the extent to which corporate liquidity is explained by external factors rather than solely by individual company decisions. Although the literature on cash holdings is extensive, the speculative motive remains under-explored, particularly regarding its measurement via a proxy linked to peer investment behavior. This study advances the field by proposing and testing a speculative expectation (SPEC) variable, based on the deviation between a firm's CAPEX and the sectoral median, as a proxy for the speculative motive. The research expands the literature by incorporating peer effects as a determinant of cash policy, highlighting peer influence and broadening understanding of corporate competitive dynamics, a topic rarely integrated into cash-holding models despite its importance in environments characterized by information asymmetry. The findings suggest that managers and analysts should treat cash holdings as a strategic decision adapted to the sector; that is, they should consider factors beyond internal ones alone. Cash-holding levels have implications for financial management, corporate valuation, and policy formulation in contexts of competitive uncertainty. An econometric approach was employed using sectoral and financial data from U.S. companies across industries from 2010 to 2024. The study measures the relationship between sectoral CAPEX (measured by the peer median) and corporate cash holdings, while controlling for institutional and macroeconomic variables. The results reveal a positive, statistically significant coefficient for the SPEC variable across various contemporaneous and lagged specifications, and are robust to sensitivity tests, thereby corroborating the hypothesis that increased relative investment by peers leads to higher cash holdings among U.S. companies.
Downloads
Enviado
Postado
Cómo citar
Serie
Derechos de autor 2026 Rodolfo Vieira Nunes, Eduardo Kazuo Kayo, Wilson Toshiro Nakamura, Roy Martelanc

Esta obra está bajo una licencia internacional Creative Commons Atribución 4.0.
Plaudit
Declaración de datos
-
Los datos de investigación están incluidos en el propio manuscrito


