Mutual funds, tunneling and firm performance: evidence from China

被引:0
|
作者
Amon Chizema
Wei Jiang
Jing-Ming Kuo
Xiaoqi Song
机构
[1] University of Birmingham,Birmingham Business School
[2] University of Manchester,Alliance Manchester Business School
[3] National Equities Exchange and Quotations,undefined
关键词
Mutual funds; Corporate governance; Tunneling; Firm performance; Nonlinearity; Ownership concentration; G15; G18; G23; G32; G34; G38;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
In contrast to US companies, Chinese firms have concentrated ownership with the effect that the central agency problem emanates from controlling shareholders expropriating minority shareholders, a phenomenon referred to as ‘tunneling’. This study examines the monitoring effect of mutual funds on the tunneling behavior of controlling shareholders. Due to the distinctive institutional settings in China, including a high level of ownership concentration, underdeveloped legal system in the stock markets and weak governance mechanisms in the mutual fund industry, we find that an increase in mutual fund ownership effectively mitigates the tunneling behavior of controlling shareholders thus improving firm performance. Nonetheless, after the mutual fund ownership reaches a certain threshold, an increase in concentrated mutual fund ownership is associated with heavier tunneling and lower firm performance. This may suggest that concentrated mutual funds collude with controlling shareholders in order to preserve their private interests. Moreover, the above effects are found to be more pronounced for firms with heavier tunneling activities. Our finding of the non-monotonic monitoring role of mutual funds brings attention to the private interest theory for mutual funds, an aspect that has been largely ignored in previous studies on mutual funds.
引用
收藏
页码:355 / 387
页数:32
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [42] On absolute and relative performance and the demand for mutual funds - experimental evidence
    Kliger, D
    Levy, O
    Sonsino, D
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC BEHAVIOR & ORGANIZATION, 2003, 52 (03) : 341 - 363
  • [43] The Role of Mutual Funds in Corporate Governance: Evidence from Mutual Funds' Proxy Voting and Trading Behavior
    Duan, Ying
    Jiao, Yawen
    [J]. JOURNAL OF FINANCIAL AND QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS, 2016, 51 (02) : 489 - 513
  • [44] Does portfolio concentration affect performance? Evidence from corporate bond mutual funds
    Qin, Nan
    Wang, Ying
    [J]. JOURNAL OF BANKING & FINANCE, 2021, 123
  • [45] Fund flows and performance: New evidence from retail and institutional SRI mutual funds
    Klinkowska, Olga
    Zhao, Yuan
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF FINANCIAL ANALYSIS, 2023, 87
  • [46] The impact of carbon neutrality on the investment performance: Evidence from the equity mutual funds in BRICS
    Ji, Xiangfeng
    Zhang, Yusong
    Mirza, Nawazish
    Umar, Muhammad
    Rizvi, Syed Kumail Abbas
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT, 2021, 297
  • [47] EMERGING MARKETS MUTUAL FUNDS PERFORMANCE EVALUATION: EVIDENCE FROM THE CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE
    Lemeshko, Oleksandra
    Mukhacheva, Galina
    [J]. POLITICAL SCIENCES, LAW, FINANCE, ECONOMICS AND TOURISM, VOL II, 2014, : 241 - 248
  • [48] Prior Experience of Managers and Maladaptive Responses to Performance Feedback: Evidence from Mutual Funds
    Gaba, Vibha
    Lee, Sunkee
    Meyer-Doyle, Philipp
    Zhao-Ding, Amy
    [J]. ORGANIZATION SCIENCE, 2023, 34 (02) : 894 - 915
  • [49] Performance Evaluation, Factor Models, and Portfolio Strategies: Evidence from Chinese Mutual Funds
    Chi, Yeguang
    Liu, Yu
    Qiao, Xiao
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PORTFOLIO MANAGEMENT, 2022, 48 (08): : 159 - 176
  • [50] Timing sentiment with style: Evidence from mutual funds
    Zheng, Yao
    Osmer, Eric
    Zu, Dingding
    [J]. JOURNAL OF BANKING & FINANCE, 2024, 164