An Investigation Into Ownership Concentration and Financial Performance of Listed South African Industrial Companies


Book Description

This paper examines the relationship between ownership concentration and corporate performance amongst listed South African industrial firms. The study's theory base is rooted in the principal-agent problem and seeks to investigate the theory's applicability to the South African context. Descriptive statistical analysis is performed in line with existing studies (Demsetz & Lehn, 1985: Demsetz & Villalonga, 2001: Morck et al., 1988). The percentage sums of the five and ten largest shareholders as well as firm market capitalisation are treated as independent variables. The financial measures of Tobin's Q and return on capital employed (ROCE) form the dependent variables as a basis for measuring firm financial performance. The results suggest that there is no statistically significant relationship between ownership concentration and firms' financial performance in the case of Tobin's Q or ROCE during the survey period. However, a statistically significant positive relationship between firms' market capitalisation and financial performance is found. The study tentatively suggests that the separation of ownership from control does not appear to have any negative behavioural implications for the theory of the firm in the South African context. Future research is encouraged to confirm these results.




An Analysis of Effects of Ownership on Capital Structure and Corporate Performance of South African Firms


Book Description

The question of whether ownership matters remains an important one in corporate financial policy. The types of owners of the means of production in an economy and the extent to which ownership is concentrated or diffused are important issues for an economy because they may have important effects on the leadership and control of such firms. Such effects influence the economy at macro level. The work by Berle and Means (1932:47) was based on firms owned by many shareholders with small ownership stakes, which were run by professional managers who had little or no ownership, leading to questions of ownership and corporate performance. Important decisions have to be made in firms regarding capital structure and performance. Although the literature covers the effects of concentration and types of ownerships on capital structure and corporate performance, the results are mixed. Theoretical studies explain factors that affect leverage and corporate performance but empirical studies provide inconclusive results. The questions pertaining to the effects of ownership concentration on leverage and corporate performance persist, with different institutional settings contributing to the lack of generalisable results. Inconclusive results are also attributed to the different statistical methods employed and the time periods of such studies. Few studies combine several ownership types and ownership concentration to analyse their effects on capital structure and corporate performance, especially in developing countries. Therefore, the purpose of this research was to investigate the effects of ownership on capital structure and corporate performance in South Africa. Ownership in this study was subdivided into ownership concentration and ownership type. The Herfindahl index was the measure of ownership concentration at the top one, two, three, five and 10 shareholding levels and the types of ownerships consisted of institutional investors, families, government, management, foreigners, companies, Public Investment Corporation, black people and other shareholders. Dependent variables in the relationship with capital structure were long-term debt, short-term debt and total debt ratios based on market value and book value, and the leverage factor. Corporate performance was measured by return on assets, return on equity, TobiniÌ8℗¿℗ưs Q, economic value-added and market value-added as the dependent variables. Capital structure and other theories were used to examine the relationship between ownership and capital structure and results from previous studies were also used to investigate the relationship between ownership and corporate performance. To achieve these objectives, the research used an unbalanced panel of data from 205 non-financial companies listed for an 11-year period from 2004 to 2014 and the fixed effects and the generalised method of moments models to analyse the data. The study found that ownership concentration, ownership by the Public Investment Corporation and black people had negative effects on capital structure. An implication for ownership concentration is that as it increased, the shareholders preferred to use less debt, perhaps meaning that they did not consider it important to take advantage of the monitoring capability associated to debt. Similar reasoning could be attributed to the Public Investment Corporation although an aversion to risk could also be a possible explanation. Due to the way black shareholdings have traditionally been funded in South Africa, such shareholders could shun debt. Ownership by institutions, families, directors, companies and foreigners had positive effects on capital structure. These results implied that some shareholders, such as institutional investors, companies and foreign investors could prefer to use debt in monitoring management. Findings for managerial ownership and capital structure could imply that these types of shareholders used debt to avoid diluting their shareholdings due to their limited wealth. The effect of government ownership on capital structure was mixed. Foreign ownership and ownership by other shareholders had positive effects on corporate performance. The implications of these findings are that foreign investors monitor and provide skills and technology to their investee firms, thereby increasing the performance of these firms. Ownership by management, institutions, black shareholders and the Public Investment Corporation had negative effects on corporate performance. These findings could imply managerial entrenchment, lack of monitoring by the Public Investment Corporation and institutional investors or low levels of shareholdings to enable them to commit resources to investee firms and inadequate experience on the part of black shareholders.




Ownership and Governance of Companies


Book Description

Apartheid South Africa was often thought to run in the interests of the business elite. Yet 27 years after apartheid, those business interests remain largely entrenched. Why? Did the South African business community play a role in engineering this outcome – perhaps recognising the apartheid era was over, and jumping ship in time? Conversely, the mission of the ANC was widely perceived to be to shift wealth and power into the hands of the whole community. Yet despite ‘black empowerment’ measures, corporate ownership remains largely in white hands – and certainly in the hands of an elite few, even though no longer restricted to whites. This picture is replicated across the global south, where corporate ownership tends to be concentrated in the hands of an elite, rather than being more democratically spread. Why have alternative corporate forms not been pursued more vigorously, with ownership in the hands of customers, employees, and local communities? In the case of South Africa, where the majority of customers and employees are black, this could have delivered on the ANC’s mission to replace the apartheid era with a democratic one – in terms of wealth, incomes and power, as well as in terms of voting and civic rights. This edited volume explores all these questions and looks at ways to align corporate forms with economic and social goals. The chapters in this book were originally published as special issues of International Review of Applied Economics.




A Study on the Effects of Industry and Time on Profitability in Listed South African Companies


Book Description

The determinants of the antecedents of the profitable performance of companies are a field of interest which should be at the forefront of the mind of the executives of any profit making institution. Industry structure and its effects on profitability have long been a focus of study in the management literature. This study focuses on the effects industry and time have on profitability in the South African business milieu. A quantitative research method was followed whereby three different profitability ratios were calculated across two hundred and eighty nine listed South African entities over a ten year period to determine if there is a statistically significant link between industry effect and profitability as well as time and profitability. The study was undertaken in the form of hypotheses tests to determine if such links did exist. In the empirical evidence resulting form the hypothesis tests, three out of the three tests for industry effect on profitability were found to be statistically significant and two of the three tests for the effect of time on profitability were found to be statistically significant. These results show that in South African listed companies, industry has a statistically significant effect on profitability. While the effect of time on profitability does appear to be statistically significant however this is dependent on the types of profitability measures used.







Proceedings of the International Colloquium on Business and Economics (ICBE 2022)


Book Description

This is an open access book. Doctoral Program of Economics and Business Faculty, Universitas Sebelas Maret organizes the 2022 International Colloquium onBusiness and Economics. The conference will be conducted bothonline and offline (hybrid) in Economic Faculty of UNS, Solo, onSeptember 27-28, 2022. In this conference, 30 papers were selectedfor international proceedings. Faculty of Economics and Business Universitas Sebelas Maret is one ofthe respectable Business School in Indonesia. In the recent releasefrom the Times Higher Education (THE), the faculty is categorized asTop 10 Economics and Business Faculty among hundreds University inIndonesia. Currently, our faculty have 3 undergraduate degrees, 3master’s degrees, and 1 doctoral degree program and all of them areaccredited with a rank “A”.




Corporate Governance in South Africa


Book Description

This book provides an examination of corporate governance in South Africa which includes an overview of the history of corporate governance and summary of the key provisions of South Africa’s codes on corporate governance from 1994 to 2016. The aim is to provide a comprehensive reference for academics and practitioners interested in South African corporate governance and to illustrate how corporate governance practices evolve in a developing African economy. It also includes a review of the research dealing with the drivers and consequences of South African corporate governance. The focus is on South African-specific research which is complemented with international references. This book will be highly relevant to both accounting/governance academics and the broader practitioner community.




Inequality Studies from the Global South


Book Description

This book offers an innovative, interdisciplinary approach to thinking about inequality, and to understanding how inequality is produced and reproduced in the global South. Without the safety net of the various Northern welfare states, inequality in the global South is not merely a socio-economic problem, but an existential threat to the social contract that underpins the democratic state and society itself. Only a response that is firmly grounded in the context of the global South can hope to address this problem. This collection brings together scholars from across the globe, with a particular focus on the global South, to address broad thematic areas such as the conceptual and methodological challenges of measuring inequality; the political economy of inequality in the global South; inequality in work, households and the labour market; and inequalities in land, spaces and cities. The book concludes by suggesting alternatives for addressing inequality in the global South and around the world. The pioneering ideas and theories put forward by this volume make it essential reading for students and researchers of global inequality across the fields of sociology, economics, law, politics, global studies and development studies.