Execution costs, investability, and actual foreign investment in emerging markets

被引:7
|
作者
Ahn, Hee-Joon [1 ]
Cai, Jun [2 ]
Cheung, Yan-Leung [3 ]
机构
[1] Sungkyunkwan Univ, SKK Business Sch, Seoul, South Korea
[2] City Univ Hong Kong, Dept Econ & Finance, Kowloon, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
[3] Educ Univ Hong Kong, Dept Social Sci, Tai Po, Hong Kong, Peoples R China
关键词
Emerging markets; Foreign ownership; Execution costs; Investability; G11; G15; OWNERSHIP RESTRICTIONS; CROSS-COUNTRY; ASSET PRICES; HOME BIAS; LIQUIDITY; INFORMATION; LIBERALIZATION; ILLIQUIDITY; RISK; FIRM;
D O I
10.1108/CFRI-04-2018-0030
中图分类号
F8 [财政、金融];
学科分类号
0202 ;
摘要
Purpose This paper focuses on execution costs as liquidity measure. Execution costs are related to volatility and are an important component of a firm's cost of capital. The purpose of this paper is to examine whether emerging market firms have lower execution costs when they face less restrictions on foreign investment and when they have more foreign shareholders. Design/methodology/approach The authors begin by documenting the cross-sectional behavior of execution costs. The authors then obtain preliminary evidence on the interaction between execution costs, the investability index and actual foreign investment. These results foreshadow those the authors obtain with the regression analysis. The ordinary least square results show that more investable firms have lower execution costs after the authors control for firm size, stock price, return volatility, industry effects and country effects. This evidence is very robust and highly significant. Direct foreign ownership (FO) in emerging market firms also appear to be associated with lower execution costs. The economic benefit from lowering the investability index on trade execution costs is highly significant. Findings Using a large cross-sectional sample from 23 emerging markets, the authors show that firms with more ex ante restrictions on FO, measured by the investability index, have lower execution costs, such as quoted spreads (QS) and effective spreads (ES), after the authors control for firm size, stock price, return volatility, industry factors and country effects. In addition, direct FO in emerging market firms appears to be associated with lower execution costs. However, ex ante restrictions on FO dominate the influence of direct FO. For a 0.5 increase in the investability index in the range of 0-1, the QS will be reduced by 17 percent of the mean QS, and the ES will be reduced by 12 percent of the mean ES from the sample stocks. Originality/value There are important differences between the approach and most of the financial liberalization studies. First, whereas most of the earlier studies are conducted at the level of country or market analysis, the investigation is at the level of individual stocks. Second, the authors focus on a cross-sectional association that avoids a criticism leveled at time series analyses. Over-time studies often use specific time points to represent financial liberalization watersheds. This approach can be misleading when financial liberalizations are viewed as processes that unfold over time. Third, the proxies for financial openness are available not only for individual firms across markets, but the authors also make a distinction between potential and actual foreign investment. The authors further categorize actual foreign investment into direct and indirect FO.
引用
收藏
页码:143 / 167
页数:25
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] FOREIGN INVESTMENT, CORPORATE OWNERSHIP, AND DEVELOPMENT: ARE FIRMS IN EMERGING MARKETS CATCHING UP TO THE WORLD STANDARD?
    Peter, Klara Sabirianova
    Svejnar, Jan
    Terrell, Katherine
    [J]. REVIEW OF ECONOMICS AND STATISTICS, 2012, 94 (04) : 981 - 999
  • [42] Optimal investment and consumption with return predictability and execution costs
    Ma, Guiyuan
    Siu, Chi Chung
    Zhu, Song-Ping
    [J]. ECONOMIC MODELLING, 2020, 88 : 408 - 419
  • [43] Foreign ownership in emerging stock markets
    Battena, Jonathan A.
    Vo, Xuan Vinh
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MULTINATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT, 2015, 32 : 15 - 24
  • [44] Foreign speculators and emerging equity markets
    Bekaert, G
    Harvey, CR
    [J]. JOURNAL OF FINANCE, 2000, 55 (02): : 565 - 613
  • [45] On foreign drivers of emerging markets fluctuations
    Bajraj, Gent
    Lorca, Jorge
    Wlasiuk, Juan M.
    [J]. ECONOMIC MODELLING, 2023, 129
  • [46] The performance of active investment positions in foreign markets
    Fedenia, Mark
    Skiba, Hilla
    Sokolyk, Tatyana
    [J]. JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS STUDIES, 2023, 54 (02) : 285 - 305
  • [47] Sunk costs, investment incentives and foreign direct investment inflow
    Cheng, CZ
    Ni, XY
    [J]. THIRD WUHAN INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON E-BUSINESS: GLOBAL BUSINESS INTERFACE, 2004, : 82 - 89
  • [48] Domestic Labor Markets and Foreign Direct Investment
    Haaland, Jan I.
    Wooton, Ian
    [J]. REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS, 2007, 15 (03) : 462 - 480
  • [49] Labor Markets and the Demand for Foreign Direct Investment
    Pandya, Sonal S.
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION, 2010, 64 (03) : 389 - 409
  • [50] Offshore investment funds: monsters in emerging markets?
    Kim, W
    Wei, SJ
    [J]. JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, 2002, 68 (01) : 205 - 224