A study of the existence of systematic discrimination against Chinese firms listed on SGX.

With persistently low Price-to-Earnings (PE) ratio prevalent among Chinese firms listed on the Singapore Stock Exchange (SGX), this paper aims to investigate if any systematic discrimination against these S-chips exists. With a common set of financial ratios and through cross-sectional regression, t...

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Main Authors: Yeo, Josephine Rui Ting., Lim, Zuan Ling., Ong, Cherilyn Li Jing.
Other Authors: Cao Yong
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/43863
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-438632023-05-19T06:09:00Z A study of the existence of systematic discrimination against Chinese firms listed on SGX. Yeo, Josephine Rui Ting. Lim, Zuan Ling. Ong, Cherilyn Li Jing. Cao Yong Nanyang Business School DRNTU::Business::General::Moral and ethical aspects With persistently low Price-to-Earnings (PE) ratio prevalent among Chinese firms listed on the Singapore Stock Exchange (SGX), this paper aims to investigate if any systematic discrimination against these S-chips exists. With a common set of financial ratios and through cross-sectional regression, the paper studies if there is any difference in their explanatory power on the stock returns of two different groups of SGX-listed stocks; the Chinese stock and Non-Chinese stock. Through existing literature reviews, a regression model is employed to examine the relationship between these financial ratios – Total Asset Turnover, Return on Assets, Price-to-Sales ratio, Dividend Growth Rate, Net Cash Per Share, Long-Term Debt/Equity ratio and the annualized stock returns over a 8-year period (2002 to 2009). The Corporate Governance Index (CGI) is also used in the regression against the stock returns as a composite measure of the corporate governance of Chinese firms. A total of 154 Chinese firms and 616 non-Chinese firms listed on SGX were used in this study. From our results, it is found that systematic differences do exist; particularly, investors discriminate against the Chinese firms. Through further analysis of the results for the earnings and non-earnings ratios, as well as the CGI, it is revealed that the generalization of earnings management across Chinese firms contributes to this discrimination. Unless such a stereotype is rectified, the problem of low stock returns are likely to persist among Chinese firms listed on SGX, hence decreasing SGX’s attractiveness as the preferred foreign exchange for Chinese firms. Overall, this paper has implications on SGX, investors, as well as Chinese firms seeking to list on the Singapore market. BUSINESS 2011-05-04T08:11:46Z 2011-05-04T08:11:46Z 2011 2011 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/43863 en Nanyang Technological University 47 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Business::General::Moral and ethical aspects
spellingShingle DRNTU::Business::General::Moral and ethical aspects
Yeo, Josephine Rui Ting.
Lim, Zuan Ling.
Ong, Cherilyn Li Jing.
A study of the existence of systematic discrimination against Chinese firms listed on SGX.
description With persistently low Price-to-Earnings (PE) ratio prevalent among Chinese firms listed on the Singapore Stock Exchange (SGX), this paper aims to investigate if any systematic discrimination against these S-chips exists. With a common set of financial ratios and through cross-sectional regression, the paper studies if there is any difference in their explanatory power on the stock returns of two different groups of SGX-listed stocks; the Chinese stock and Non-Chinese stock. Through existing literature reviews, a regression model is employed to examine the relationship between these financial ratios – Total Asset Turnover, Return on Assets, Price-to-Sales ratio, Dividend Growth Rate, Net Cash Per Share, Long-Term Debt/Equity ratio and the annualized stock returns over a 8-year period (2002 to 2009). The Corporate Governance Index (CGI) is also used in the regression against the stock returns as a composite measure of the corporate governance of Chinese firms. A total of 154 Chinese firms and 616 non-Chinese firms listed on SGX were used in this study. From our results, it is found that systematic differences do exist; particularly, investors discriminate against the Chinese firms. Through further analysis of the results for the earnings and non-earnings ratios, as well as the CGI, it is revealed that the generalization of earnings management across Chinese firms contributes to this discrimination. Unless such a stereotype is rectified, the problem of low stock returns are likely to persist among Chinese firms listed on SGX, hence decreasing SGX’s attractiveness as the preferred foreign exchange for Chinese firms. Overall, this paper has implications on SGX, investors, as well as Chinese firms seeking to list on the Singapore market.
author2 Cao Yong
author_facet Cao Yong
Yeo, Josephine Rui Ting.
Lim, Zuan Ling.
Ong, Cherilyn Li Jing.
format Final Year Project
author Yeo, Josephine Rui Ting.
Lim, Zuan Ling.
Ong, Cherilyn Li Jing.
author_sort Yeo, Josephine Rui Ting.
title A study of the existence of systematic discrimination against Chinese firms listed on SGX.
title_short A study of the existence of systematic discrimination against Chinese firms listed on SGX.
title_full A study of the existence of systematic discrimination against Chinese firms listed on SGX.
title_fullStr A study of the existence of systematic discrimination against Chinese firms listed on SGX.
title_full_unstemmed A study of the existence of systematic discrimination against Chinese firms listed on SGX.
title_sort study of the existence of systematic discrimination against chinese firms listed on sgx.
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/43863
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