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1 – 1 of 1The author aims to find value relevance of board characteristics and ownership structures in the banking industry of Bangladesh, an emerging economy with absence of good…
Abstract
Purpose
The author aims to find value relevance of board characteristics and ownership structures in the banking industry of Bangladesh, an emerging economy with absence of good governance.
Design/methodology/approach
Pooled Ordinary Least Square (OLS), fixed effect and generalized method of moments (GMM) methods have been utilized to analyse 5-year data of 28 listed banks.
Findings
All governance indicators except institutional ownership have insignificant impact on return on asset (ROA) and return on equity (ROE). Institutional ownership has significant negative impact indicating that institutional investors can worsen bank performance in unregulated environments. Additional analysis shows significant positive impact of higher institutional ownership ratios.
Research limitations/implications
Small sample from a single industry of one country may limit the applicability of the findings to all developing economies.
Practical implications
During the fast growth periods of developing economies, institutional investors with small stakes may become value destructive due to speculative behaviour.
Originality/value
This is one of the pioneering studies to suggest that governance mechanisms have insignificant, in some instances adverse, impact on firm value in emerging economies.
Details