2021
DOI: 10.5296/ijafr.v11i2.18751
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Financial Risk and Cost Stickiness: Evidence From Egypt

Abstract: This study seeks to investigate whether the cost of goods sold (COGS) behaves asymmetric to change in sales, and examines the effect of financial risk on asymmetric cost behavior of COGS in the Egyptian manufacturing firms. The financial data of this study were collected from the published annual reports for a sample of 65 Egyptian listed manufacturing firms during the period (2006-2015) with total observations 530 firm-year. The analysis of this paper is based on Anderson et al.’s (2003) cost stickiness model… Show more

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“…Cost stickiness was not found in all industries. In line with Ibrahim and Ezzat (2017), Ibrahim (2018) and Mandour (2021) found that the cost of goods sold behavior appears to be sticky; it rises more when sales increase than when it falls for equivalent sales decrease.…”
Section: Cost Stickiness In Egyptsupporting
confidence: 65%
“…Cost stickiness was not found in all industries. In line with Ibrahim and Ezzat (2017), Ibrahim (2018) and Mandour (2021) found that the cost of goods sold behavior appears to be sticky; it rises more when sales increase than when it falls for equivalent sales decrease.…”
Section: Cost Stickiness In Egyptsupporting
confidence: 65%