Impact of Financial Reporting Quality on the Implied Cost of Equity Capital: Evidence from the Malaysian Listed Firms

Asian Journal of Business and Accounting, 3(1), 2010, 1-25, ISSN 1985-4064

26 Pages Posted: 15 Oct 2012

Date Written: October 14, 2012

Abstract

This paper investigates the factors associated with firms’ financial reporting choices and their economic impact on the cost of equity capital for the Malaysian listed firms over the period of 2000-2007. We find that there is a negative association between financial reporting quality choice and the number of shareholders, industrial competition, capital intensity and leverage. We also find that firms choosing to provide financial information of higher quality enjoy a lower cost of equity capital using implied cost of equity capital estimates. These findings suggest that those firms in emerging markets which provide higher quality of financial reporting reduce information risk, and these firms also obtain significant economic benefits.

Keywords: Accruals, Cash Flows, Cost of Equity Capital, Financial

JEL Classification: M41, G30, G32

Suggested Citation

Othman, Radiah, Impact of Financial Reporting Quality on the Implied Cost of Equity Capital: Evidence from the Malaysian Listed Firms (October 14, 2012). Asian Journal of Business and Accounting, 3(1), 2010, 1-25, ISSN 1985-4064, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2161689

Radiah Othman (Contact Author)

Massey University ( email )

School of Accountancy
Palmerston North
New Zealand

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
294
Abstract Views
1,599
Rank
187,942
PlumX Metrics