Do Cross-Listed Firms Have a Better Governance Structure and Lower Agency Costs? Evidence from Chinese Firms
Citations

WEB OF SCIENCE

3
Citations

SCOPUS

5

초록

This study examines whether an influence from a difference in corporate governance structure exists on firms' agency costs between Chinese companies cross-listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange (HKSE) and those that are domestically listed ones. We determine that, overall, companies with an HKSE cross-listing had better corporate governance than those without. The corporate governance advantage of the HKSE cross-listed firms holds if we control for firm fixed effects and resolve the potential endogeneity problem between corporate governance and agency costs by using two-stage least square (2SLS) regression analysis with instrumental variables. Specifically, the HKSE cross-listed firms had better corporate governance in terms of board size and institutional ownership. By contrast, domestically listed firms experienced the adverse effects of institutional owner's roles and higher board pay. The advantages of HKSE cross-listed firms may stem from the benefits of having a larger board size and the effective monitoring of the management by the institutional stockholders. Implications are drawn for the debate on cross-listing and the future challenges of Chinese firms, and a more robust monitoring is necessary for sustainable finance of their stock markets.

키워드

cross-listingcorporate governanceagency costsChinese firmsCAPITAL-MARKET EQUILIBRIUMCORPORATE GOVERNANCEOWNERSHIP STRUCTURELISTINGSPROTECTIONCOMPANIESTOP
제목
Do Cross-Listed Firms Have a Better Governance Structure and Lower Agency Costs? Evidence from Chinese Firms
저자
Kim, Dong-SoonYeo, EunjungZhang, Li
DOI
10.3390/su13041734
발행일
2021-02
유형
Article
저널명
Sustainability
13
4
페이지
1 ~ 25

파일 다운로드