Capital Structure Decisions Revisited: Integrating Trade-Off, Pecking Order, and Market Timing Theories
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.66578/btis.v2i1.18Keywords:
Capital structure, Trade-off theory, Pecking order theory, Market timing, Leverage dynamics, Corporate financeAbstract
This paper revisits three foundational theories of capital structure Trade-Off Theory, Pecking Order Theory, and Market Timing Theory, and develops an integrative framework that reconciles their persistent coexistence in empirical research. Rather than treating these theories as competing explanations, the study conceptualizes capital structure decisions as a dynamic, context dependent process shaped by information asymmetry, market valuation conditions, firm life cycle stage, and institutional environment. The framework proposes that pecking order behavior dominates under high information asymmetry, market timing becomes salient during periods of favorable equity valuation, and trade-off considerations govern long term leverage adjustment. Importantly, these mechanisms interact and operate sequentially rather than independently. The paper advances a set of refined, testable propositions that incorporate interaction effects and temporal sequencing, helping to reconcile mixed empirical findings and persistent leverage behavior. By shifting the focus from theory competition to theory complementarity, the study provides a coherent foundation for future empirical research and offers strategic guidance for managerial financing decisions.
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