Affiliation:
1. Department of Finance and Economics Manchester Metropolitan University Manchester UK
2. Department of Accounting and Financial Management Newcastle Business School, University of Northumbria Newcastle UK
3. Department of Accounting, Faculty of Commerce Zagazig University Zagazig Egypt
Abstract
AbstractThis study advances the literature in cash holdings in that it empirically examines the impact of corruption prevention commitment (CPC) on the cash holding strategic decisions and how such CPC might interact with cash holdings to affect firm value. We employ a sample of UK non‐financial publicly listed firms and our results are of twofold. First, we detect a significant negative relationship between CPC and cash holdings, which is consistent with the expected governance effect of CPC. Second, we find a negative interaction of CPC with cash holdings when investigating cash holdings effect on firm value, suggesting that shareholders consider CPC as an overinvestment in corporate social responsibility (CSR) activity within a strong customer protection framework, such as the UK. Our findings are robust to different econometric estimations and controlling for different explanatory variables. This study offers beneficial perceptions into the notion of sustainability and sustainability standards and their implications on firms financing decisions. Finally, we argue that while this paper investigates the UK context, our results might be applicable to other countries with similar anti‐corruption structure as in the UK.
Subject
Economics and Econometrics,Finance,Accounting