The objective of this paper is to determine whether corporate financial performance may be influenced from intangible assets owned by a company and some special incurring expenditures benefiting the intangible value of the company even though such items could also be technically expensed contrary to getting capitalized. Combining the intangibles reported on the corporate balance sheets with the expenditures such as R&D, staff and advertising expenses, a variable called Calculated Value of Intangible Factors (CVIF) is specifically generated and is examined as to whether intangibles alone might potentially have a significant effect on corporate profitability ratios, and if so to what extent. The sample consists of non-financial public companies traded at Muscat Securities Market in Oman and the sampling period covers the time window from 2013 until 2017. Two regressors are used to capture the effect of intangible factors; meaning CVIF and CVIF/Total Assets (CVIFTA) respectively, the latter of which is a relative measure. Four (4) profitability measures, namely Gross Profit Margin (GPM), EBIT Margin (EBITM), Net Profit Margin (NPM) and Return on Assets (ROA) are developed as proxies to indicate for corporate financial performance. Considering all the resulting eight (8) models each, panel data regression analyses are performed separately to specifically document the linkage between corporate intangibles and corporate financial performance. Results provide a strong evidence by showing that intangibles do have a significant and a positive effect on corporate financial performance, except when ROA is regressed by CVIFTA rather than CVIF. This effect on and the linkage with financial performance is documented to be the most robust once GPM and NPM are to indicate the performance in the forms of CVIF and CVIFTA respectively.
Dividends (profit share) and profitability (financial performance) still remain unarguably among the most salient attributes of financial research. This paper is interested in empirically exploring if and how signalization theory works in general while being interested in also exploring to what extent dividends may account for the corporate profitability being corporate financial performance in particular. Dynamic panel regressions are performed to test our predictions on twelve (12) different models for an emerging market economy with a sampling time window spanning 2000 through 2018 for 45 listed companies. Financial firms (FFs) versus Non-Financial firms (NFFs) are examined separately and compared together. Although results usually document that (present) dividends tend to be irrelevant in accounting for (signalling future) corporate profitability. However, we have found evidence that dividends, for NFFs, were documented to be relevant in explaining future corporate profitability when the regressed variable is proxied as Return on Capital which may be captured as Earnings Before Tax/Paid-in Capital. In particular, the relationship between present corporate dividend distribution and future corporate profitability is positive, suggesting the higher (lower) the dividends the higher (lower) the profitability. In addition, of all the models tested, for a sizeable fraction, we have also found significant linkage between the lagged and the leadership values of the dependent variable being corporate profitability or corporate financial performance, either for FFs or NFFs if not both.
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