Institutional Investors’ Horizons and Bank Transparency
Journal of Business Finance and Accounting, Forthcoming.
60 Pages Posted: 27 Jan 2024
Date Written: July 22, 2023
Abstract
We examine the relation between institutional investors’ horizons and bank transparency. The novelty of this research is to consider three important aspects of transparency: disclosure quality, private information gathering, and auditor fees. We find strong evidence indicating that banks dominated by long-term (short-term) institutional shareholders exhibit higher (lower) levels of disclosure quality. However, there is no evidence that investor horizon has a differential effect on private information gathering and audit pricing. The study employs alternative proxies and estimations such as two-stage least squares and propensity score matching to address endogeneity. We also document that banks with higher short-term institutional shareholding are associated with lower crash risk. These findings are particularly significant because poor bank transparency has been identified as a contributing factor to the 2007-2009 financial crisis.
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