Performance of Government-Linked Firms Listed on Two Stock Exchanges of the United Arab Emirates: An Empirical Study
In the United Arab Emirates, the government holds ownership in 48 percent of all stock exchange-listed firms. However, prior evidence does not make clear whether the government linkage of a company via ownership holding is good or bad for the firm's performance. We propose two hypotheses. The a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Emerging markets finance & trade 2014-01, Vol.50 (sup1), p.212-236 |
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description | In the United Arab Emirates, the government holds ownership in 48 percent of all stock exchange-listed firms. However, prior evidence does not make clear whether the government linkage of a company via ownership holding is good or bad for the firm's performance. We propose two hypotheses. The agency hypothesis holds that government ownership negatively affects firm performance. The support hypothesis postulates that government ownership helps a firm to improve performance. Using a sample of 114 companies, we find that the government-linked companies (GLCs) have better accounting results than do the companies that are not linked to the government (non-GLCs), yet the GLCs are undervalued in the financial market. Subsample analyses reveal that the best accounting results are those of the GLCs in which the government holds 20 to 50 percent of the ownership. If the government takes control of a company by holding more than 50 percent ownership, the accounting results are not improved, yet, unlike other GLCs, these GLCs are overvalued. |
doi_str_mv | 10.2753/REE1540-496X5001S114 |
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However, prior evidence does not make clear whether the government linkage of a company via ownership holding is good or bad for the firm's performance. We propose two hypotheses. The agency hypothesis holds that government ownership negatively affects firm performance. The support hypothesis postulates that government ownership helps a firm to improve performance. Using a sample of 114 companies, we find that the government-linked companies (GLCs) have better accounting results than do the companies that are not linked to the government (non-GLCs), yet the GLCs are undervalued in the financial market. Subsample analyses reveal that the best accounting results are those of the GLCs in which the government holds 20 to 50 percent of the ownership. If the government takes control of a company by holding more than 50 percent ownership, the accounting results are not improved, yet, unlike other GLCs, these GLCs are overvalued.</description><subject>Accounting</subject><subject>Agency theory</subject><subject>corporate governance</subject><subject>firm performance</subject><subject>government ownership</subject><subject>government-linked companies</subject><subject>Hypotheses</subject><subject>Public enterprise</subject><subject>Stock exchanges</subject><subject>Stockholders</subject><subject>Studies</subject><issn>1540-496X</issn><issn>1558-0938</issn><fulltext>true</fulltext><rsrctype>article</rsrctype><creationdate>2014</creationdate><recordtype>article</recordtype><recordid>eNp9kE1vEzEQQFeISpTSf8DBEuK44I-1d5cLiqptQYoEalOJm-X1jqnTrB3GDiX_HofkABdO9sjveaRXVa8ZfcdbKd7fDgOTDa2bXn2TlLI7xppn1TmTsqtpL7rnh_vp_UX1MqV1gTrBuvMqfwV0EWcTLJDoyE38CRhmCLle-vAIE7n2OCey9CmXIQayeorkLkf7SIZf9sGE75AOYn4Ach_8AVqgGckwezQZ0geyCGXYevTWbIq5m_avqjNnNgkuT-dFtboeVlef6uWXm89Xi2VtG97nWvbCCKDGKd7xcRSTGq2SXNlusk6BZJMR3AkAx6wCYVo1CaM4jCNYaJ24qN4cv91i_LGDlPU67jCUjZpJwVvVs5YXqjlSFmNKCE5v0c8G95pRfcirT3n133mL9vaorVOO-I8jaKt507RS9bRwH4-cD386P0XcTDqb_Saiw5LdJy3-u-k3AbePSw</recordid><startdate>20140101</startdate><enddate>20140101</enddate><creator>Uddin, Md Hamid</creator><creator>Halbouni, Sawsan</creator><creator>Raj, Mahendra</creator><general>Routledge</general><general>M.E. 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subjects | Accounting Agency theory corporate governance firm performance government ownership government-linked companies Hypotheses Public enterprise Stock exchanges Stockholders Studies |
title | Performance of Government-Linked Firms Listed on Two Stock Exchanges of the United Arab Emirates: An Empirical Study |
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