Performance of widely held and cross holding firms in Malaysia

This study investigates the relationship between widely held firms (WH) and cross holding firms (CH) and their performance in an area which to the researcher’s knowledge has not been studied before in Malaysia. WH firms are classified as public listed firms where individual shareholdings do not exce...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nallamuthu, Balamurugan
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/51774/
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/51774/1/GSM%202013%208RR.pdf
_version_ 1848851922471092224
author Nallamuthu, Balamurugan
author_facet Nallamuthu, Balamurugan
author_sort Nallamuthu, Balamurugan
building UPM Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This study investigates the relationship between widely held firms (WH) and cross holding firms (CH) and their performance in an area which to the researcher’s knowledge has not been studied before in Malaysia. WH firms are classified as public listed firms where individual shareholdings do not exceed 20% whereas CH firms are public listed entities with more than 20% ownership by another public listed firm. This study adopted the expected performance model created by Barber and Lyon in 1996 to determine the performance of the two types of firms. Thus, this research developed the expected performance models of the firms and compared them with actual and not past performance as extensively used in prior studies. To derive accurate industry comparisons, sample firms are re-categorized according to the Malaysia Standard Industrial Classification 2008 (MSIC, 2008). Prior studies used the Bursa Malaysia industry classification to compare the performance of firms against the industry. This study is based on panel data for 16 WH firms, 21 CH firms and 163 industry benchmark firms in Malaysia for the period 2004 to 2011. The main objectives of the study are to compare the abnormal performance of WH and CH firms and to determine the relationship between abnormal performance and the two types of firms. Abnormal return on assets (ABROA) and abnormal return on sales (ABROS) were used to measure their performance. Based on ABROA and ABROS,the findings of the study show that the performance of CH firms to be superior to WH firms. This was confirmed by an independent means test. For the relationship between CH ownership and abnormal performance, statistical tests show that CH firms positively related to both ABROA and ABROS, although the latter is not significantly related to their performance. In contrast, widely held firms are negatively related to abnormal performance. Here too ABROS is not statistically significant in explaining the relationship. This study also noted that leverage as a control variable negatively related to abnormal performance regardless of the ownership type. This is consistent with previous studies conducted on firms in Malaysia and other parts of the world. Performance is positively related to the age of firms in both categories with older firms managing their assets more efficiently to create better results. On an overall basis, in Malaysia the performance of CH firms is better than that of WH firms and the CH firm shows positive relationship with performance and WH is negatively related with performance.
first_indexed 2025-11-15T10:29:53Z
format Thesis
id upm-51774
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-15T10:29:53Z
publishDate 2013
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling upm-517742017-04-14T08:28:48Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/51774/ Performance of widely held and cross holding firms in Malaysia Nallamuthu, Balamurugan This study investigates the relationship between widely held firms (WH) and cross holding firms (CH) and their performance in an area which to the researcher’s knowledge has not been studied before in Malaysia. WH firms are classified as public listed firms where individual shareholdings do not exceed 20% whereas CH firms are public listed entities with more than 20% ownership by another public listed firm. This study adopted the expected performance model created by Barber and Lyon in 1996 to determine the performance of the two types of firms. Thus, this research developed the expected performance models of the firms and compared them with actual and not past performance as extensively used in prior studies. To derive accurate industry comparisons, sample firms are re-categorized according to the Malaysia Standard Industrial Classification 2008 (MSIC, 2008). Prior studies used the Bursa Malaysia industry classification to compare the performance of firms against the industry. This study is based on panel data for 16 WH firms, 21 CH firms and 163 industry benchmark firms in Malaysia for the period 2004 to 2011. The main objectives of the study are to compare the abnormal performance of WH and CH firms and to determine the relationship between abnormal performance and the two types of firms. Abnormal return on assets (ABROA) and abnormal return on sales (ABROS) were used to measure their performance. Based on ABROA and ABROS,the findings of the study show that the performance of CH firms to be superior to WH firms. This was confirmed by an independent means test. For the relationship between CH ownership and abnormal performance, statistical tests show that CH firms positively related to both ABROA and ABROS, although the latter is not significantly related to their performance. In contrast, widely held firms are negatively related to abnormal performance. Here too ABROS is not statistically significant in explaining the relationship. This study also noted that leverage as a control variable negatively related to abnormal performance regardless of the ownership type. This is consistent with previous studies conducted on firms in Malaysia and other parts of the world. Performance is positively related to the age of firms in both categories with older firms managing their assets more efficiently to create better results. On an overall basis, in Malaysia the performance of CH firms is better than that of WH firms and the CH firm shows positive relationship with performance and WH is negatively related with performance. 2013-06 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/51774/1/GSM%202013%208RR.pdf Nallamuthu, Balamurugan (2013) Performance of widely held and cross holding firms in Malaysia. Masters thesis, Universiti Putra Malaysia. Corporations - Malaysia Stock ownership - Malaysia Corporate governance - Law and legislation
spellingShingle Corporations - Malaysia
Stock ownership - Malaysia
Corporate governance - Law and legislation
Nallamuthu, Balamurugan
Performance of widely held and cross holding firms in Malaysia
title Performance of widely held and cross holding firms in Malaysia
title_full Performance of widely held and cross holding firms in Malaysia
title_fullStr Performance of widely held and cross holding firms in Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed Performance of widely held and cross holding firms in Malaysia
title_short Performance of widely held and cross holding firms in Malaysia
title_sort performance of widely held and cross holding firms in malaysia
topic Corporations - Malaysia
Stock ownership - Malaysia
Corporate governance - Law and legislation
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/51774/
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/51774/1/GSM%202013%208RR.pdf