Effect of Financial Performance on Capital Structure of Listed Manufacturing Companies in Kenya
Abstract
This paper examines the portability of the reverse
causality hypothesis between financial performance and capital
structure of listed manufacturing firms in Kenya. Most research
carried out in East Africa, Kenya inclusive shunned the likely
effect of performance on capital therefore, to achieve this
objective, financial performance was proxy by return on assets
and return on equity while the capital structure was measured
by total debt ratio and debt to equity ratios. The data employed
covered 7 companies for the period from 2010 to 2016. While the
Panel Vector Auto regression was applied and analysed using
EVIEWS 10, the Wald granger causality test was carried out to
determine the possibility of causality between the variables. The
result reveals that past performance does not have a significant
effect on the capital structure as measure by total debt ratio
while it was established that capital structure composition of the
firms affects their financial performance as measured by return
on assets and return on equity. However, employing the debt-
equity ratio as a measure of capital structure, it was established
that a bi-directional relationship exists between DER and ROA
while it was the opposite in the case of ROE. The study,
therefore, concludes that the behaviour of the listed
manufacturing firms in their choice of capital structure
composition reflects both the efficiency risk and franchise value
hypotheses. It, therefore, recommends that firms should strive
more for returns to enhance the value of the firm to maximize
the wealth of the shareholders