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DC Field | Value | Language |
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dc.contributor.author | Basu, Debarati | |
dc.contributor.author | Sen, Kaustav (Supervisor) | |
dc.contributor.author | Sen, Purusottam (Supervisor) | |
dc.date.accessioned | 2021-09-01T03:17:48Z | - |
dc.date.available | 2021-09-01T03:17:48Z | - |
dc.date.issued | 2016 | |
dc.identifier.uri | https://ir.iimcal.ac.in:8443/jspui/handle/123456789/3500 | - |
dc.description | Call No: 338.70954 BAS | |
dc.description | Accession No. TH171 | |
dc.description | Physical Description: xx, 203p. ; 30cm. | |
dc.description | Subject Area/Academic Groups: Marketing | |
dc.description | Members, DPR Committee: Purusottam Sen | |
dc.description | Chairperson: Kaustav Sen | |
dc.description.abstract | The business group as an organizational form is one of the many unique business structures that exist in the global economy. Literature aimed at understanding whether group-affiliated firms function differently from standalone firms, more so with respect to basic corporate finance decisions like investing, financing and reporting has remained scarce. It is in this context that we, through three empirical essays based on India, aim to understand and provide answers to some unresolved questions related to how group-affiliated firms differ from standalone firms when making corporate finance decisions. Business groups are a dominant economic force in India particularly and have been so historically. About 31 percent of firms in India belong to business groups but this 31 percent accounts for almost 59 percent of total assets held by all firms in India. This highlights the economic significance of business groups in the Indian context and makes it imperative to understand how they work. Also, since India's economic liberalization in 1991 and especially since Goldman Sachs identified India as one of the four most important economic powers among the emerging countries in 2001, Indian capital markets have become increasingly important to the international investor. According to estimates by a PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) report, India is slated to become the third largest economy in the world by 2030, from its 2013 rank of ten. This makes India an important market to study. Thus, within the Indian context, the first chapter explores corporate reporting decisions at business groups. The Satyam fraud in 2008, which is India's biggest corporate scam ever, 2 involved not just large scale manipulations of reported figures but also elaborate and complex transactions between multiple companies owned by family members of Satyam's Chairman like Maytas. This sparked an interest in examining earnings manipulation within business groups where internal capital markets remain a necessary evil. It is in this context that we examine if and why group-affiliated firms decide to use more real earnings management to inflate reported figures in the first essay. Our analysis reveals that group-affiliated firms engage in significantly higher real earnings management than standalone firms. We then examine accruals-based earnings management constraints and reputation concerns as possible reasons for firms opting to manage real earnings. While these reasons are found to motivate all firms to manage real earnings more, they fail to explain the higher real earnings management at group-affiliated firms. Further, analysis of internal capital markets within business groups reveals that group-affiliated firms invest in group firms via internal capital markets and then use real earnings management to shield the outcome of such investment from other stakeholders. The shielding helps ensure a rising stock returns momentum. Having found evidence of group-affiliated firms engaging in higher real earnings management, in the next essay we focus on how such firms shield their reporting misdemeanours over longer periods. In the second essay, we explore whether firms proactively create reserves by understating reported figures over long periods in anticipation of real earnings management requirements and then release these reserves to inflate reported figures, as and when required. We study the association between being unconditionally conservative and engaging in more real earnings management and how organization structure impacts this association. Unconditionally conservative firms are found to engage in more real earnings management. Our results further reveal that business group engage in more conservatism-based real earnings management than standalone firms. Moreover, real earnings management at unconditionally conservative business 3 group firms is found to be inefficient, compared to standalone firms where the real earnings management is generally found to be more efficient. Since the first two essays in this thesis help identify costs at business groups, the third essay explores whether external stakeholders can see through some of the wrongdoings and segregate the good group-affiliated firms from the bad firms. Within this context, we explore the impact of additional disclosure requirements, i.e., ownership and governance-based regulations, on a firm's capital constraints as measured by its investment-cash flow sensitivity. We further examine whether this sensitivity is affected by variation in agency costs, due to group affiliation and insider ownership. Investment-cash flow sensitivity is found to decrease after mandatory disclosures increase, in particular for those firms that had limited access to external capital earlier. Group-affiliated firms are found to have lower investment-cash flow sensitivity (i.e., enjoyed better access to external capital) before regulation, which increases after regulation when compared to standalone firms. On further analysis of only group-affiliated firms, this increase in sensitivity is found restricted to only firms with high insider ownership that perform poorly in the future. Overall, this thesis helps understand further how corporate decision making varies at business groups from that at standalone firms. It identifies why business group firms manage earnings by manipulating real activities and also provides evidence on how accounting policies that are meant to be cautious can be misused. The thesis also shows how regulations in low enforcement regions like India and other emerging countries can be useful in separating out the efficient firms from the opportunistic ones thus, reducing business costs. | |
dc.publisher | Indian Institutte of Management Calcutta | |
dc.subject | Business group | |
dc.subject | India | |
dc.subject | Business structures | |
dc.subject | Finance decisions | |
dc.subject | Entrepreneurship and small business ventures | |
dc.title | Business groups in India | |
Appears in Collections: | Marketing |
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