Do Public Firms Invest Differently than Private Firms? Taking Cues from the Natural Gas Industry

0502 economics and business 05 social sciences
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.2031614 Publication Date: 2012-04-04T17:11:26Z
ABSTRACT
We study how listing status affects investment behavior. Theory offers competing hypotheses on how listing-related frictions affect investment decisions. We use detailed data on 74,670 individual projects in the U.S. natural gas industry to show that private firms respond less than public firms to changes in investment opportunities. Private firms adjust drilling activity for low capital-intensity investments. However, they do not increase drilling in response to new capital-intensive growth opportunities. Instead, they sell these projects to public firms. Our evidence suggests that differences in access to external capital are important for explaining the investment behavior of public and private firms.
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