Fund ownership and stock price informativeness of Chinese listed firms
Fund ownership and stock price informativeness of Chinese listed firms
We examine the impact of mutual fund ownership on stock price informativeness in China. Existing evidence shows that stock price informativeness is low in China, and attributes this to firms’ lack of disclosure incentives under the weak investor protection institutional environment. Mutual funds are more sophisticated and influential than individual investors to monitor firms, and thus serve as an external governance mechanism to improve corporate transparency. However, the impact of mutual funds in China can also be moderated by state ownership of listed firms, which reduces firms’ dependence on outside investors for capital. Indeed, we find that mutual fund ownership is positively related to share price informativeness, but this effect is less pronounced among state-controlled firms. The main policy implication from our findings is that mutual funds contribute to the corporate information environment of emerging economies but further privatization of listed firms would be needed to realize greater benefit.
share price informativeness, mutual funds, state ownership, ownership structure, china
166-185
Ding, Rong
ca23647f-00f4-42d4-a308-6570c8e370b5
Hou, Wenxuan
eb0d410d-b603-47bf-ab14-e8d26389b007
Kuo, Jing-Ming
4ded9336-66d1-4a13-bc34-5473e6532eb6
Lee, Edward
1187554c-590e-458c-92f1-05bd7757e768
July 2013
Ding, Rong
ca23647f-00f4-42d4-a308-6570c8e370b5
Hou, Wenxuan
eb0d410d-b603-47bf-ab14-e8d26389b007
Kuo, Jing-Ming
4ded9336-66d1-4a13-bc34-5473e6532eb6
Lee, Edward
1187554c-590e-458c-92f1-05bd7757e768
Ding, Rong, Hou, Wenxuan, Kuo, Jing-Ming and Lee, Edward
(2013)
Fund ownership and stock price informativeness of Chinese listed firms.
[in special issue: Financial Management in China]
Journal of Multinational Financial Management, 23 (3), .
(doi:10.1016/j.mulfin.2013.03.003).
Abstract
We examine the impact of mutual fund ownership on stock price informativeness in China. Existing evidence shows that stock price informativeness is low in China, and attributes this to firms’ lack of disclosure incentives under the weak investor protection institutional environment. Mutual funds are more sophisticated and influential than individual investors to monitor firms, and thus serve as an external governance mechanism to improve corporate transparency. However, the impact of mutual funds in China can also be moderated by state ownership of listed firms, which reduces firms’ dependence on outside investors for capital. Indeed, we find that mutual fund ownership is positively related to share price informativeness, but this effect is less pronounced among state-controlled firms. The main policy implication from our findings is that mutual funds contribute to the corporate information environment of emerging economies but further privatization of listed firms would be needed to realize greater benefit.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 7 March 2013
Published date: July 2013
Keywords:
share price informativeness, mutual funds, state ownership, ownership structure, china
Organisations:
Southampton Business School
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 357057
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/357057
ISSN: 1042-444X
PURE UUID: 4fae412f-0541-42b4-b127-cb0eaf90a52a
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Date deposited: 25 Sep 2013 09:01
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 14:54
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Contributors
Author:
Rong Ding
Author:
Wenxuan Hou
Author:
Jing-Ming Kuo
Author:
Edward Lee
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