Livestock enterprises are characterized by profound volatility in biological assets and policy sensitivity, leading to widespread challenges in financing constraints and environmental uncertainty. This study explores the strategic role of financial flexibility in enhancing firm performance within this volatile context. Using panel data from 70 A-share livestock-listed firms in China from 2013 to 2023 ( N = 542 observations), we construct a composite index of financial flexibility and employ a high-dimensional fixed-effects estimation framework to empirically assess its impact and mechanisms. The results reveal an inverted U-shaped relationship between financial flexibility and firm performance, with an optimal turning point at 0.667, indicating that moderate financial flexibility maximizes firm performance. Moreover, financing constraints act as a significant mediator in this relationship, while environmental uncertainty amplifies the marginal effect of financial flexibility. Robustness analyses confirm the stability of these findings across alternative estimation specifications. The results suggest that maintaining an optimal level of financial flexibility not only alleviates financing constraints but also enhances resilience to external uncertainty. Policy-wise, governments should refine credit-rating and subsidy mechanisms to mitigate financing pressure, especially for small and medium-sized enterprises, while firms should establish early-warning systems of financial flexibility and optimize internal governance to sustain stable performance and promote the sustainable development of the livestock sector.
Zhang et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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