Political uncertainty and cash holdings: Evidence from China

We examine the relation between political uncertainty and cash holdings for firms in China. We document that, during the first year of a new city government official's appointment, a firm, on average, holds less cash, which is consistent with the grabbing hand hypothesis of politician. Our resu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of corporate finance (Amsterdam, Netherlands) Netherlands), 2016-10, Vol.40, p.276-295
Hauptverfasser: Xu, Nianhang, Chen, Qinyuan, Xu, Yan, Chan, Kam C.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We examine the relation between political uncertainty and cash holdings for firms in China. We document that, during the first year of a new city government official's appointment, a firm, on average, holds less cash, which is consistent with the grabbing hand hypothesis of politician. Our results are robust to alternative measures of cash holdings, instrumental variable estimation, sub-samples without firms in four major cities, a matched sample approach, and placebo tests. In addition, our additional analyses suggest that a firm holds significantly less cash if: (a) the newly appointed official is from a different city relative to that from the same city, (b) it faces high political extraction risk, and (c) it has strong twin agency conflicts. Lastly, our extended results suggest that the market value of cash holdings is significantly negative during periods of political uncertainty and firms hide their cash by moving it to related firms via related party transactions. •We examine the relation between political uncertainty and a firm's cash holdings.•We use the first year of a new official's appointment to measure uncertainty.•A firm, on average, holds less cash.•It is consistent with the grabbing hand hypothesis of politician.•Our results are robust.
ISSN:0929-1199
1872-6313
DOI:10.1016/j.jcorpfin.2016.08.007