Bachelorarbeit, 2013
63 Seiten, Note: 1
1. INTRODUCTION
2. PRE-RECESSION POSITIONING AND PERFORMANCE
2.1. Implications of Operational Efficiency
2.2. The Pallet of Downturn Opportunities
2.3. The Hypothesis
3. METHODOLOGY
3.1. The Sample
3.2. Financial Flexibility Analysis
3.2.1. Metrics in Detail
3.2.2. The Determination of Financial Flexibility
3.3. High Performance Business Analysis
3.3.1. Dimensions and Metrics in Detail
3.3.2. The Determination of Relative Performance
3.4. Hypothesis Testing
4. RESULTS
4.1. Financial Flexibility Analysis Results
4.2. High Performance Business Analysis Results
4.3. Hypothesis Testing
5. DISCUSSION
This thesis examines whether companies with a high level of financial flexibility at the outset of the Great Recession were better positioned to outperform their industry peers in the following five-year period. By focusing on the IT industry, the study analyzes the relationship between initial liquidity and profitability and the subsequent long-term relative business performance of these firms.
1. INTRODUCTION
The business cycle is a cyclical phenomenon and major concern for all sorts of businesses. The recurring short run alternation between contractions and expansions hurts companies across industries forcing many firms to drastic cut backs in order to adapt to the decrease in demand. The Global Financial Crisis followed by the Great Recession was a major downturn which struck the whole world economy. Even though there were indicators which suggested that there was a possible crisis ahead the Global Financial Crisis which was seemed to have arrived largely unexpected: IMF, World Economic Outlook April/ 2007: “[…] this World Economic Outlook sees global economic risks as having declined since our last issue in September 2006. Certainly this is at odds with many recent newspaper headlines and commentary, which have focused on problems related to U.S. mortgages, the potential for “disorderly” unwinding of global imbalances, and worries about rising protectionist pressures. Nevertheless, as discussed in Chapters 1 and 2, looking at the big picture, we actually see the continuation of strong global growth as the most likely scenario.“
In 2008 the world GDP growth plummeted and reached a negative annual growth of -2.2% in 2009 (The World Bank 2013). Stock prices crashed and the MSCI World Index dropped by 42 percent together with the S&P 500 which went down by 38 percent. Whole industries were churned during the recession and lots of companies suffered from dramatic losses in revenues. In many cases the survival of a company depends on the management’s ability to properly react on the decrease in demand. A common way to do so is to formulate comprehensive measures in order to secure financial fundamentals, protect profitability and maximize valuation to avoid hostile takeovers (Rhodes and Stelter 2009, p.3f).
1. INTRODUCTION: This chapter introduces the context of the business cycle and the Great Recession, outlining the premise that financial positioning influences a firm's ability to survive and thrive during downturns.
2. PRE-RECESSION POSITIONING AND PERFORMANCE: This section explores how operational efficiency and specific downturn opportunities—such as R&D investment and M&A—can be leveraged by well-positioned firms to outperform rivals.
3. METHODOLOGY: The chapter details the research design, including the selection of the sample of 100 IT firms and the application of Financial Flexibility and High Performance Business models to measure relative performance.
4. RESULTS: This section presents the empirical findings of the study, noting that companies identified as "Financial Flexibles" in 2007 demonstrated statistically significant outperformance compared to "Non Financial Flexibles" by 2012.
5. DISCUSSION: The final chapter reflects on the results, acknowledging that while financial flexibility is a key driver for performance, it should be integrated into broader management strategies to ensure long-term success.
Financial Flexibility, Great Recession, IT Industry, Business Cycle, Operational Efficiency, High Performance Business Analysis, Liquidity, Profitability, Downturn Navigation, Capital Structure, Stock Performance, Market Capitalization, Relative Performance, Hypothesis Testing, Investment Strategy
The thesis investigates whether IT companies that were financially flexible at the beginning of the Great Recession in 2007 were subsequently able to outperform their industry competitors over the following five years.
The work covers corporate finance, recession management, the impact of business cycles on company performance, and the strategic use of liquidity and profitability as drivers for competitive advantage.
The primary goal is to test the hypothesis that a high level of Financial Flexibility at the outset of a major economic downturn significantly increases a firm's probability of achieving superior industry-peer outperformance.
The research employs a quantitative approach using two ratio-based models: the Financial Flexibility Analysis (FFA) and the High Performance Business Analysis (HPBA), followed by a statistical t-test for independent samples to determine significance.
The main body defines the theoretical framework of recession navigation, details the construction of the IT sample, explains the metrics used to assess financial positioning and long-term performance, and reports the statistical outcomes.
Key terms include Financial Flexibility, Great Recession, IT industry performance, operational efficiency, liquidity, market capitalization, and industry-peer outperformance.
The sample consisted of 100 publicly traded IT companies drawn from the 2007 top 300 IT companies, selected based on market capitalization data to ensure they were active at the onset of the recession.
The author chose the IT industry to maintain a consistent industry-level focus, as both the Financial Flexibility and High Performance Business models rely on industry-specific benchmarks that would be distorted by cross-industry comparisons.
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