Title: YanLeung Cheung P' Raghu Rao Aris Stouraitis
1The helping hand, the lazy hand, or the grabbing
hand? Government shareholders in publicly listed
firms in China
by Yan-Leung Cheung P. Raghu Rao Aris
Stouraitis
discussion by Sankar De Corporate Governance
in Emerging Markets Conference November, 2007
2Outline
- General observations
- Interpretation of main results
- Relation to the existing literature
- Some methodological comments
- Concluding remarks
3General observations
- Promising paper. The result that publicly listed
companies with significant state ownership at the
local level engages in value-destroying related
party transactions with SOEs is interesting and
convincing, though hardly surprising. - Hand-collected data on listed company/SOE adds
value - Has an interesting implication for an
increasingly important trajectory of research in
law and finance area. Country studies such as
the present paper can add significant insights to
law and finance literature traditionally
dominated by cross-country studies (as shown by
Allen-Qian-Qian (AQQ,2005), Allen-Chakrabarti-De-Q
ian-Qian (ACDQQ, 2007)
4General observations
- On the other hand, the data and the results on
corruption are less convincing and not very
well-tied to the first part of the paper. - The claim that related party transactions are
used by corrupt state officials as a specific
channel to transfer resources away from public
firms to SOEs, and then to their personal
coffers, is at best conjectural. - What does a larger number of misappropriation
cases in the total number of corruption cases
prosecuted signify?
5Interpretation of main results
- While the main result about related-party
transactions with SOEs seems fairly robust, what
does it tell us? How to interpret it?
Specifically, - As AQQ (2005) show, listed firms (along with
SOEs) are only a very small part of the Chinese
economy, so whatever the authors find regarding
the role of local governments (grabbing hands)
cannot be generalized very much. - In fact, there is evidence that local government
officials have played a helping hand in dealing
with non-state, non-listed firms (the hybrid
sector firms in AQQ), especially in the coastal
areas where economic growth has been much faster.
6Interpretation of main results
- Combining (b) and the papers evidence, is it
possible that local government officials may
behave DIFFERENTLY with regard to different
firms? For example, - they generally lend a helping hand toward the
hybrid sector firms (because these firms have
considerable potential profits that could be
shared, local government officials incentives
can be aligned with those of the entrepreneurs), - they behave much worse when dealing with listed
firms with large state ownership, since these
firms are at best average, and hence the best
strategy for the officials may be to grab as much
as possible while they can
7Relation to the existing literature
- The authors seem to be missing some very
important and relevant papers. Necessary to
consult them to position the paper better. - Two types of papers
- Expropriation in the context of law and finance
literature - The Law and Economics of Self-Dealing , 2006, by
Simon Djankov, Rafael La Porta, Florencio
Lopez-de-Silanes, Andrei Shleifer (DDLS). The
related transactions described in the paper are
very much in line with the activity described in
DLLS (and hence can be interpreted as case
studies in China)
8Relation to the existing literature
- Perverse effects of state ownership in China
- Ownership, Institutions, and Capital Structure
Evidence from China, 2007 by Kai Li, Heng Yue,
and Longkai Zhao. SOEs have easier access to
long-term loans, especially from banks, and have
higher leverage than non-state firms - Financial Distress without Bankruptcy The Case
of China, 2007, by Joseph Fan, Jun Huang, and
Ning Zhu. SOEs are more likely to
face distress and receive soft lending during
distress, and less likely to recover from
distress. - Das (Wasted) Kapital Firm Ownership and
Investment Efficiency in China, 2007, by David
Dollar and Shang-jin Wei. SOEs have much lower
returns than privately-owned firms (both domestic
and foreign. Reallocation of capital from state
to private sector would improve efficiency and
economic growth significantly.
9Some methodological comments
- Institutional background the hand collected
data on related transactions is a strong plus for
the paper. But the authors should provide more
institutional background on the disclosure
requirements. How can we be sure that the OTHER
transactions (acquisitions and asset sales) are
indeed NON-related? - They should also discuss what type of related
transactions should be disclosed (they can
consult DLLS (2006) on this issue) and when (the
timing of the disclosure). - The institutional info would also help us
understand whether we can use CAR as the main
performance metric in statistical tests (see the
next point).
10A few methodological comments
- Use of CAR as the primary test metric The paper
basically uses CAR (announcement returns of
relates transactions) as the main vehicle to
test the effect of government-controlled related
transactions/ tunneling. The procedure is valid
if financial markets are semi-strong form
efficient. Chinas financial stock markets are
by no means efficient, and hence the paper needs
to address the appropriateness of this method.
Specifically, - Are the sample firms frequently traded and how do
their P/E ratios compare to other similar listed
firms during normal times? - As a robustness test, can we look at the
non-market based performance of the firms
(accounting, financial variables, whether going
into distress, whether executives are arrested
etc) following these transactions?
11A few methodological comments
- Low explanatory power of the regression tests
very low R2 in all regressions (see tables 3b,
4b, 5c, 5d) raises doubts about the results.
Significantly, adding controls does not improve
R2 (table 3b). Are they the right controls then? - Concerns re anti-corruption effectiveness index
- Significance of the variables?
- High correlation between the variales
12Concluding remarks
- Interesting main result backed by hand-collected
data offers promise of a good contribution. - Law and economics angle should be explored
further.
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