Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
973641 Pacific-Basin Finance Journal 2013 18 Pages PDF
Abstract

We test the relation between firm-level corporate governance and the market reaction to announcements of violations of rules and regulations by Thai listed firms. We find no significant difference in market reaction when firms with high and low governance scores commit violations. We do find a larger negative abnormal return when firms with low past violation records violate the rules. The market reaction is especially strong, − 8.1% on average, when firms with low past violations and low governance scores commit violations. The evidence suggests that investors rely on a combination of observed behavior (violations) and the firm's formal governance policies to learn about the firm's true governance practices.

► We test the relation between firm governance and the market reaction to violations. ► The Thai market reacts negatively when firms commit violations. ► No difference in market reaction between firms with high and low governance score. ► Market reaction strongest for firms with low past violations and poor governance. ► Implication: investors learn governance practice from violations and firm policies.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Economics, Econometrics and Finance Economics and Econometrics
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