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Intangible investments and voluntary delisting: mass exodus of Chinese firms from US stock exchanges

Intangible investments and voluntary delisting: mass exodus of Chinese firms from US stock exchanges
Intangible investments and voluntary delisting: mass exodus of Chinese firms from US stock exchanges
Purpose
Drawing on a cost–benefit perspective, this paper aims to explore the relation between information asymmetry and the decision to delist from stock exchanges during periods of uncertainty. Specifically, it investigates the role of firms’ intangible investments and the availability of alternative sources of finance on the decision to delist from foreign stock markets.

Design/methodology/approach
The study takes advantage of a natural experiment in which cross-listed Chinese firms facing uncertainty in US markets because of widespread allegations of accounting fraud decide on whether to remain listed or voluntarily delist. The decision to delist is modelled as a function of the level of information asymmetry between firms and their stakeholders and the availability of alternative financing, while controlling for other drivers of firms’ delisting decision. The data used in the empirical analyses cover a hand-collected sample of 91 Chinese firms voluntarily delisting from US stock markets between 2010 and 2016. This sample is matched with an equal sample of Chinese firms, which remained listed in US stock markets during the same period. A probit regression model accounting for fixed effects is used.

Findings
There is a significant positive relationship between investments in intangible assets and firms’ decision to delist. Moreover, the positive intangibles−delisting nexus is accentuated by the availability of alternative sources of financing. Collectively, the results are consistent with the theoretical argument that the higher information asymmetry associated with intangible assets may increase the cost of staying listed on stock exchanges, particularly in periods of uncertainty (captured in this study by accounting fraud allegations targeting cross-listed firms). The results have important implications for corporate managers, capital market participants and policymakers.

Practical implications
Policymakers and standard setters must continue to work to improve the accounting regulations of intangible assets and to promote the adoption of global accounting standard across both emerging and advanced economies.

Originality/value
The study exploits a unique natural experimental setting to explore why cross-listed firms delist. The underlying theoretical framework to explain delisting is new. This framework captures the role of information asymmetry, uncertainty and alternative financing in explaining the cost and benefits of remaining listed on a foreign market.
1834-7649
224-243
Agyei-Boapeah, Henry
37005f29-d453-458e-b6b5-cd92e55587a4
Wang, Yuan
e33da8bc-d27e-44c5-a6e5-df4c1e9c3f83
Tunyi, Abongeh A.
5b8bebf9-5060-4f17-8cee-14ce3a93b458
Machokoto, Michael
c7cbeeb7-34ba-48c9-aa3c-560eb24e97ec
Zhang, Fan
80b2da97-91fa-40ea-a2ce-af88c9d37c39
Agyei-Boapeah, Henry
37005f29-d453-458e-b6b5-cd92e55587a4
Wang, Yuan
e33da8bc-d27e-44c5-a6e5-df4c1e9c3f83
Tunyi, Abongeh A.
5b8bebf9-5060-4f17-8cee-14ce3a93b458
Machokoto, Michael
c7cbeeb7-34ba-48c9-aa3c-560eb24e97ec
Zhang, Fan
80b2da97-91fa-40ea-a2ce-af88c9d37c39

Agyei-Boapeah, Henry, Wang, Yuan, Tunyi, Abongeh A., Machokoto, Michael and Zhang, Fan (2019) Intangible investments and voluntary delisting: mass exodus of Chinese firms from US stock exchanges. International Journal of Accounting and Information Management, 27 (2), 224-243. (doi:10.1108/IJAIM-12-2017-0146).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Purpose
Drawing on a cost–benefit perspective, this paper aims to explore the relation between information asymmetry and the decision to delist from stock exchanges during periods of uncertainty. Specifically, it investigates the role of firms’ intangible investments and the availability of alternative sources of finance on the decision to delist from foreign stock markets.

Design/methodology/approach
The study takes advantage of a natural experiment in which cross-listed Chinese firms facing uncertainty in US markets because of widespread allegations of accounting fraud decide on whether to remain listed or voluntarily delist. The decision to delist is modelled as a function of the level of information asymmetry between firms and their stakeholders and the availability of alternative financing, while controlling for other drivers of firms’ delisting decision. The data used in the empirical analyses cover a hand-collected sample of 91 Chinese firms voluntarily delisting from US stock markets between 2010 and 2016. This sample is matched with an equal sample of Chinese firms, which remained listed in US stock markets during the same period. A probit regression model accounting for fixed effects is used.

Findings
There is a significant positive relationship between investments in intangible assets and firms’ decision to delist. Moreover, the positive intangibles−delisting nexus is accentuated by the availability of alternative sources of financing. Collectively, the results are consistent with the theoretical argument that the higher information asymmetry associated with intangible assets may increase the cost of staying listed on stock exchanges, particularly in periods of uncertainty (captured in this study by accounting fraud allegations targeting cross-listed firms). The results have important implications for corporate managers, capital market participants and policymakers.

Practical implications
Policymakers and standard setters must continue to work to improve the accounting regulations of intangible assets and to promote the adoption of global accounting standard across both emerging and advanced economies.

Originality/value
The study exploits a unique natural experimental setting to explore why cross-listed firms delist. The underlying theoretical framework to explain delisting is new. This framework captures the role of information asymmetry, uncertainty and alternative financing in explaining the cost and benefits of remaining listed on a foreign market.

Text
Intangible - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 18 December 2017
Published date: 7 May 2019

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 434317
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/434317
ISSN: 1834-7649
PURE UUID: a1761ef6-0abd-4e76-ac41-887058d0c91d
ORCID for Henry Agyei-Boapeah: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4798-6324

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 19 Sep 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:41

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Contributors

Author: Yuan Wang
Author: Abongeh A. Tunyi
Author: Michael Machokoto
Author: Fan Zhang

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