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This study examines the impact of internal governance on the valuation of R&D investments and the wealth effect of R&D expenditure increases. It also explores the joint effect of internal governance and growth opportunities on R&D value creation.
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The Influence of Corporate Internal Governance on the Wealth Effect of R&D Expenditure Increases Shao-Chi Chang National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan Sheng-Syan Chen National Taiwan University, Taiwan Wen-Chun Lin National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan
Motivation • Investments in R&D are major sources of inputs for growth and competitive power • The evidences for the wealth effect of R&D investments are mixed • Positive (Chan, Martin, and Kensinger, 1990) • Insignificant (Sundaram, John, and John, 1996)
Difficulties in R&D Valuation • Information asymmetry • Not required to disclose information of R&D projects • To value R&D projects is difficult • The benefits of R&D last long-run period • To require R&D to be expensed is unsuitable
Motives for R&D Expenditure Increases • Tool of earnings management • To change the timing of R&D spending • Agency costs • To invest in unprofitable projects
The Benefits of Internal Governance • To reduce information risks • To disclose credible information • To control the level of earnings manipulation • To reduce agency costs • To cut down the inefficiency investments
Purpose +
Sample Design • Sample period: 1988-2001 • Announcement collected from Dow Jones News • Database: CRSP, Compustat, Compact D, SEC proxy statement • Final sample size: 243 announcements
Abnormal Returns • Standard event-study method • Use CAR (-1,0) to capture the wealth effects • Table 2 – the market response to R&D expenditure increases announcements.
Measures of Internal Governance • Board Characteristics • Fraction of outside directors • Board size • Ownership Structure • Blockholder ownership • Insider ownership • Leadership Structure • Duality
Board Characteristics • Outside director on the board • Serve a useful monitoring function. (Weisbach, 1988) • Board size • Larger board is valuable for the breadth of its services. • Smaller board is manageable and plays a controlling function. (Jensen, 1993) • Optimal board size should be neutral to firm performance. (Lehn, Patro, and Zhao, 2004)
Ownership Structure • Blockholder ownership (Allen and Phillips, 2000) • more incentive to monitor management • more ability to take the cost to monitor • Insider ownership (Cho, 1998) • optimally diversify risk
Leadership Structure • Duality : chairman of the board and CEO is same person • Disadvantage of duality • To impair the monitoring function of a board (Lehn and Zhao, 2006) • To increase the agency problems (Fama and Jensen, 1983)
Table 3 - Abnormal Return for Subsamples Based on Internal Governance (I)
Table 3 - Abnormal Return for Subsamples Based on Internal Governance (II)
Table 4 - Joint effect of growth opportunity and Internal Governance (I)
Table 4 - Joint effect of growth opportunity and Internal Governance (II)
Table 4 - Joint effect of growth opportunity and Internal Governance (III)
Table 6 - Interaction Impact of Growth Opportunity and Internal Governance
Conclusions and Contributions • Internal governance has a impact on the valuation of R&D investments. • Internal governance and growth opportunity jointly decide the value creation of R&D investments • Internal governance explains the puzzle on the wealth effect of R&D expenditure increases