Three essays on corporate finance

In essay one, we examine how employee layoffs, actions that lower a firm’s social performance, affect stakeholder wealth and post-layoff contract terms with stakeholders. We find that although layoff-performance sensitivity is similar between firms with high and low corporate social responsibility (...

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Main Author: Selvam, Srinivasan
Other Authors: Kang Jun-Koo
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2016
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/69280
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-692802024-01-12T10:10:33Z Three essays on corporate finance Selvam, Srinivasan Kang Jun-Koo Nanyang Business School DRNTU::Business::Finance::Corporate finance In essay one, we examine how employee layoffs, actions that lower a firm’s social performance, affect stakeholder wealth and post-layoff contract terms with stakeholders. We find that although layoff-performance sensitivity is similar between firms with high and low corporate social responsibility (CSR) performance, high CSR firms’ shareholders, bondholders, and suppliers realize more negative layoff announcement returns than those of low CSR firms. High CSR firms also experience greater deterioration of supplier relationships and larger increases in loan rates and covenant numbers post layoffs. The results suggest that a firm’s commitment to fair stakeholder treatment affects its value and future stakeholder relationships. In essay two, we examine restructuring activities of family and non-family firms during the 2007 to 2009 economic crisis. Using hand-collected data on restructuring activities, we find that family firms are less likely to engage in ineffective downsizing and ineffective CEO turnover activities than non-family firms. These results are more pronounced for family firms managed by founding family CEOs. Family firms are also less likely to enter into unrelated businesses. Despite family firms’ reluctance to downsize, those that choose to do so during the crisis experience more positive stock market reactions to downsizing announcements and outperform in the post-crisis period. Our findings show that in response to the crisis, family firms undertake restructuring actions that improve firm value, suggesting that corporate ownership is an important factor that influences firms’ restructuring decisions. In essay three using major industry-level tariff reductions as the measure of customer industry competition, I examine the effect of such competition on customer-supplier trading relationships. I find that customers facing stiff competition strengthen their relationships with existing suppliers by increasing product purchases from the suppliers and maintaining post-tariff longer relationship duration, allowing the suppliers to improve their post-tariff performance. These results are concentrated in suppliers that have stronger pre-tariff relationship ties and those that are financially constrained. However, the increased purchases from financially constrained suppliers affect customer performance negatively in the post-tariff period. Overall, these results suggest that increased customer competition has both intended and unintended consequences for their trading relationships and their future performance. DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY (NBS) 2016-12-12T02:55:13Z 2016-12-12T02:55:13Z 2016 Thesis Selvam, S. (2016). Three essays on corporate finance. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/69280 10.32657/10356/69280 en 172 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::Finance::Corporate finance
spellingShingle DRNTU::Business::Finance::Corporate finance
Selvam, Srinivasan
Three essays on corporate finance
description In essay one, we examine how employee layoffs, actions that lower a firm’s social performance, affect stakeholder wealth and post-layoff contract terms with stakeholders. We find that although layoff-performance sensitivity is similar between firms with high and low corporate social responsibility (CSR) performance, high CSR firms’ shareholders, bondholders, and suppliers realize more negative layoff announcement returns than those of low CSR firms. High CSR firms also experience greater deterioration of supplier relationships and larger increases in loan rates and covenant numbers post layoffs. The results suggest that a firm’s commitment to fair stakeholder treatment affects its value and future stakeholder relationships. In essay two, we examine restructuring activities of family and non-family firms during the 2007 to 2009 economic crisis. Using hand-collected data on restructuring activities, we find that family firms are less likely to engage in ineffective downsizing and ineffective CEO turnover activities than non-family firms. These results are more pronounced for family firms managed by founding family CEOs. Family firms are also less likely to enter into unrelated businesses. Despite family firms’ reluctance to downsize, those that choose to do so during the crisis experience more positive stock market reactions to downsizing announcements and outperform in the post-crisis period. Our findings show that in response to the crisis, family firms undertake restructuring actions that improve firm value, suggesting that corporate ownership is an important factor that influences firms’ restructuring decisions. In essay three using major industry-level tariff reductions as the measure of customer industry competition, I examine the effect of such competition on customer-supplier trading relationships. I find that customers facing stiff competition strengthen their relationships with existing suppliers by increasing product purchases from the suppliers and maintaining post-tariff longer relationship duration, allowing the suppliers to improve their post-tariff performance. These results are concentrated in suppliers that have stronger pre-tariff relationship ties and those that are financially constrained. However, the increased purchases from financially constrained suppliers affect customer performance negatively in the post-tariff period. Overall, these results suggest that increased customer competition has both intended and unintended consequences for their trading relationships and their future performance.
author2 Kang Jun-Koo
author_facet Kang Jun-Koo
Selvam, Srinivasan
format Theses and Dissertations
author Selvam, Srinivasan
author_sort Selvam, Srinivasan
title Three essays on corporate finance
title_short Three essays on corporate finance
title_full Three essays on corporate finance
title_fullStr Three essays on corporate finance
title_full_unstemmed Three essays on corporate finance
title_sort three essays on corporate finance
publishDate 2016
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/69280
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