AHAM NZENWATA
1. INTRODUCTION
Financial
distress arises when a firm is not able to meet its obligations (payment of
interest and principal) to debt-holders. The firm’s continuous failure to make
payments to debt-holders can ultimately lead to insolvency. For a given level
of operating risk, financial distress exacerbates with higher debt. With higher
business risk and higher debt, the probability of financial distress becomes
much greater.
The
degree of business risk of a firm depends on the degree of operating leverage
(i.e., the proportion of fixed costs), general economic conditions, demand and
price variations, intensity of competition, extent of diversification and the
maturity of the industry.
Companies operating in turbulent business
environment and in highly competitive markets are exposed to higher operating
risk. The operating risk is further aggravated if the companies are highly
capital intensive and have high proportion of fixed costs. Matured companies in
relatively stable market conditions have lesser operating risk.
Similarly,
diversified companies with unrelated businesses are in better position to face
fluctuating market conditions. That is not to say that financial distress is
for any market industry segment or type as firms in any industry or market can
experience financial distress. More so, those that may outwardly give the
impression of being financially healthy.
Financial distress in many cases is caused by a
myriad of issues and have consequences that may not have been anticipated. The
rest of this paper will address some of the causes and consequences of
financial distress.
2.1 REVIEW OF LITERATURE
Five
related theory have been cited in previous studies in an effort to understand
and explain the phenomenon of financial distress. These are: Coalition
behaviour theory, Gamblers ruin theory, Option and credit risk theories, Cash
flow theory, and The income finance theory.
Of
the five more commonly used theoretical approaches, two directly address the
influence of investment decisions on financial distress. These two are
coalition behaviour theory (White, 1980) and cash flow theory (Aziz &
Lawson, 1989; Gentry et al., 1985a).
However,
four of the theories – cash flow theory, gamblers ruin theory, income finance
theory, and option theory – take the investment decision into account
indirectly through the profitability of the investment.
Cash
flow theory by Beaver's (1966) and Taffler (1983) views the firm as ‘a
reservoir of liquid assets which is supplied by inflows and drained by
outflows’ and states the following four propositions:
·
The larger the
reservoir, the smaller the probability of failure;
·
The larger the
net liquid-asset flow from operations (i.e. cash flow), the smaller the
probability of failure;
·
The larger the
amount of debt held, the greater the probability of failure; and
·
The larger the
fund expenditures for operations, the greater the probability of failure
Johnson
(1970) suggested that economic conditions may have discriminating power in firm
failure prediction, and many studies since then have shown that this is indeed
so. The study also showed that different accrual-based financial ratios can
predict corporate failure, depending on the underlying and expected economic
conditions.
Bhattacharjee et al (2009) show that an increase
in output per capita lowers the probability of a firm going bankrupt; that
uncertainty in the form of sharp increases in inflation and a sharp
depreciation of the currency affect newly listed firms adversely; and that
higher volatility in inflation levels lowers the probability of firms listed
for more than 25 years going bankrupt.
2.2 REASON & CONSEQUENCES OF FINANCIAL
DISTRESS
The difficulties that lead to financial distress
can be internal risk factor or external risk factors. According to financial
theory, internal risk factors usually refer to the internal problems of the
company. Therefore, they negatively affect only a particular firm or a small
number of firms within the same network. The external risk factors are
pervasive; they can affect all companies in the market.
Karels and Plakash (1987) divide all
possible causes of financial distress into two groups: internal risk factors
and external shocks. Internal risk factors can be attributed to poor
management. Potential forms of the appearance of bad management are the absence
of a sense of a need for change, inadequate communication, overexpansion,
unintentionally improper handling of projects, or fraud.
Exogenous shocks (external risk
factors) are independent of managerial skills. They can be classified into
inefficiencies in
regulatory development, turbulences in
the labor market, or natural disasters. Bibeault (1983) reveals five
significant sources of external risk: economic change, competitive change,
government constraints, social alterations, and technological change.
Nwogugu (2004) state that the
evolutionary development of corporate enterprises as well as a change to more
service-oriented economies and an increasing role of governmental regulation
provoke a shift from endogenous to exogenous causes of corporate failure.
Financial distress occurs as a consequence of management’s failing ability to
control and anticipate negative economic effects on the firm’s profitability
and future prosperity. In the sample by Nwogugu unanticipated economic shocks
cause about 15 to 40% of all distressed situations.
Financial distress may ultimately
force a company to insolvency. Direct costs of financial distress include costs
of insolvency. The proceedings of insolvency involve cumbersome process. The
conflicting interests of creditors and other stakeholders can delay liquidation
of the company’s assets. The physical conditions of assets, which are not in
use once the insolvency proceedings start, may deteriorate over time (Pandey,
2010). Their realizable values may decline. Finally, these assets may have to
be sold at prices, which are much lower than their current values.
Insolvency also causes high legal and
administrative costs. The expected costs of insolvency raises the lenders’
required rate of return, which causes a dampening effect on the market value of
equity.
Financial distress, with or without
insolvency, also has many indirect costs. These costs relate to the actions of
employees, managers, customers, suppliers and shareholders. These include the
following:
·
Employees of a
financially distressed firm may become demoralized:
·
Suppliers also
curtail or discontinue granting credit to the firm fearing liquidation and
liquidity problems
·
Investors
become concerned.
·
Shareholders
start behaving differently (in ways detrimental to the firm):
·
Managers
generally have a tendency to expropriate the firm’s resources in the form of perquisites
and avoid risk.
2.3 STAGES IN FINANCIAL DISTRESS
Financial distress can be broken down into four
stages: performance decline, economic failure, technical insolvency, and
default. While moving in and out of financial trouble, the company passes through
these four separate stages, each of which has specific attributes and,
consequently, contributes differently to corporate failure. Financial distress
is time-varying which implies that once entering it, the company does not stay
in the same state until it is liquidated or until it recovers. The stages or
phases of financial distress are as follows:
Deterioration
of Performance Stage
The deterioration of performance begins with
significant breaches in profitability. A drop in sales, changes in operating
income, and negative stock returns are indicators of further decline.In early
stages of financial distress operating income falls way below industry average.
Flat sales, increasing customer complaints about product quality, delivery, and
service as well as late financial and managerial information are signs of the
early decline as well. In this stage the company shows significant
inefficiencies at the operational level, missing operational goals and related
profit margins.
Failure Stage
Failure indicates the movement of the firm from a
viable, “tolerable” level of decline to the marginal. Operational decline leads
to the cash buffer becoming thin. Cash shortage in consequence of a permanent
reduction in cash flow triggers the change in the financial status of the
company from solvent to distressed. Given the interaction between deteriorating
profitability and insufficient liquidity, the stage of failure is more severe
than prior phases of the distress cycle, it cannot be easily overcome, and it
can lead to permanent damage and eventually irreparable decline.
Many researchers have analyzed the effect of
deterioration in profitability on the competitive position of a distressed
company: the market average earnings falls substantially behind that of its
rivals and below the market average, the trust of the stakeholders erodes, the
employees change jobs, eventually to competitors, and the firm stands in a
liquidity squeeze
Insolvency
Stage
The most serious problem a company faces at this
stage is a lack of cash flows generated from operating activity. Ross et al.
(2002) point out two important parts of the insolvency question: stocks and
flows. Thinking about insolvency on a stock basis implies that the market value
of the company’s assets is less than the face value of its debt, which results
in negative economic worth. Flow-based insolvency occurs when the operating
cash flows are insufficient to cover current obligations.
In the theory of corporate finance, a cash
shortage occurs together with a debt overhang. However, chronologically
cash-flow insolvency happens before stock-based insolvency. Since the lack of
liquidity in insolvency represents a chronic condition, it means that the decline
in cash flows will automatically reduce the fair value of assets and increase
leverage.
Default Stage
The occurrence of default symbolizes the peak of
the distress development. Default describes an event when the company cannot
repay the debt or interest to creditors at maturity and, consequently, violates
the conditions of the agreement with the debt-holder, which can be a reason for
legal action. A company can be insolvent for a long time. However, only on the
date of maturity can it become classified as defaulted on its debt. If the firm
faces this event, the negotiation and the private debt restructuring or
bankruptcy is the consequence.
3. CONCLUSION
The purpose of this paper was to explore the
theories that try to shed light on the phenomenon of financial distress in
order to understand why firms become financially distressed and remedies if any
that may be applied to correct the situation. In the course of the research, we
explored previous literature on the phenomenon and came to the following
conclusions: the causes of financial distress can be either internal or
external to the firm. Internal causes include majorly management incompetence
while external causes will include unfavourable economic policies and economic
instability. We also concluded that there are several stages in financial
distress and necessary remedies can be applied at any of the stages. The stages
in financial include the following: Deterioration of Performance Stage, Failure
Stage, Insolvency Stage and Default Stage. Finally, no matter the stage of
financial distress in a firm, appropriate measures can be taken before it
deteriorates in bankruptcy.
REFERENCES
Aziz, A., & Lawson, G. H. (1989). Cash flow
reporting and financial distress models: Testing of hypotheses. Financial
Management, 18, 55–63
Beaver, W. H. (1966). Financial ratios as
predictors of failure. Journal of Accounting Research, 4, 71–111
Bhattacharjee, A., Higson, C., Holly, S., &
Kattuman, P. (2009). Macro economic instability and business exit: Determinants
of failures and acquisitions of large UK firms. Economica, 76, 108–131
Gentry, J. A., Newbold, P., & Whitford, D. T.
(1985a). Predicting bankruptcy: If cash flow's not the bottom line, what is? Financial
Analysts Journal
Johnson, C. G. (1970). Ratio analysis and the
prediction of firm failure. Journal of Finance, 25, 1166–1168.
Pandey,
I. M. (2010) Financial Management, 10th Edition, Vikas Publishing House Pvt
Ltd, India
Taffler, R. (1983). The assessment of company
solvency and performance using a statistical model. Accounting & Business
Research, 13(52)
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