Entrepreneurial Finance Meets Government Investment At Initial Public Offering: The Role Of Minority State Ownership

Keywords

board of director; CEO; Corporate Governance; Initial public offering; New venture; state ownership

Abstract

Manuscript Type: Empirical. Research Question/Issue: Prior studies on the role of state investment tend to focus on either majority state ownership or aggregating majority and minority state ownership. Drawing upon signaling theory, we theorize that the negative intent signaled by minority state ownership reduces initial public offering (IPO) market performance. In addition, we hypothesize that founders as chief executive officers and outside directors not from state-owned enterprises, representing the positive signal of intent, can attenuate the negative effect of minority state ownership. Research Findings/Insights: The empirical results, based on 274 small and private firms in China's newly launched stock market, provide support for the hypotheses based on price premium, first-day turnover rate, first-day price increase, underpricing, and Tobin's Q. Theoretical/Academic Implications: To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to examine how minority state ownership affects small and private firm IPO performance. It suggests new avenues of research on ownership structure and the principal-principal problem in the corporate governance of emerging economies. This study reveals the distinctive nature and effect between controlling state ownership and minority state ownership. The current research also opens new avenues of research on applying signaling theory, signal of intent in particular, in an IPO study. Practitioner/Policy Implications: This study reveals the negative intent signaled by minority state ownership in privately controlled firms at IPO due to the weak monitoring capacity, limited resource provision, and enhanced political interdependency between private controllers and minority state owners. As minority state ownership becomes a more salient phenomenon in emerging markets, it guides policy makers in governance choices for government-funded firms.

Publication Date

3-1-2018

Publication Title

Corporate Governance: An International Review

Volume

26

Issue

2

Number of Pages

97-117

Document Type

Article

Personal Identifier

scopus

DOI Link

https://doi.org/10.1111/corg.12227

Socpus ID

85041196890 (Scopus)

Source API URL

https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/85041196890

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