母国投资者保护、股权结构与交叉上市公司对sox强制内部控制缺陷披露的遵从

G. Gong, B. Ke, Yong Yu
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引用次数: 58

摘要

我们研究了母国投资者保护和所有权结构是否影响交叉上市公司遵守sox规定的内部控制缺陷(ICD)披露。我们为交叉上市公司在第302条报告制度下虚假报告ICD的可能性开发了一个代理。对于在投资者保护薄弱的国家注册的交叉上市公司,我们有三个主要发现。首先,在第302条报告制度下,管理人员控制公司并拥有超过现金流权的投票权的公司比其他公司更有可能误报ICD。其次,在第404条生效日期之前,ICD误报的可能性与美国证券交易委员会自愿注销之间存在正相关关系。第三,对于选择不注销注册的公司,在404条款报告制度下,ICD误报的可能性与先前未披露的ICD报告之间存在正相关关系。我们没有发现在投资者保护力度强的国家注册的交叉上市公司有类似的证据。我们的研究结果与假设一致,即对于在投资者保护薄弱的国家注册的交叉上市公司,有能力和动机征用外部小股东的管理者不愿意披露icd,以保护其私人控制利益。我们的研究结果应该对那些希望识别不合规公司以进行更密切监管的监管者,那些希望识别财务披露质量差的事先危险信号的投资者,以及那些希望了解控制交叉上市公司财务披露行为的经济力量的研究人员感兴趣。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Home Country Investor Protection, Ownership Structure and Cross-listed Firms’ Compliance with SOX-mandated Internal Control Deficiency Disclosures
We examine whether home country investor protection and ownership structure affect cross-listed firms' compliance with SOX-mandated internal control deficiency (ICD) disclosures. We develop a proxy for the likelihood of cross-listed firms' ICD misreporting during the Section 302 reporting regime. For cross-listed firms domiciled in weak investor protection countries, we have three main findings. First, firms whose managers control their firms and have voting rights in excess of cash flow rights are more likely to misreport ICD than other firms during the Section 302 reporting regime. Second, there is a positive association between the likelihood of ICD misreporting and voluntary deregistration from the SEC prior to the Section 404 effective date. Third, for firms that chose not to deregister, there is a positive association between the likelihood of ICD misreporting and the reporting of previously undisclosed ICDs during the Section 404 reporting regime. We do not find similar evidence for cross-listed firms domiciled in strong investor protection countries. Our findings are consistent with the hypothesis that, for cross-listed firms domiciled in weak investor protection countries, managers who have the ability and incentive to expropriate outside minority shareholders are reluctant to disclose ICDs in order to protect their private control benefits. The results of our study should be of interest to regulators who wish to identify noncompliant firms for closer supervision, investors who wish to identify ex ante red flags for poor financial disclosure quality, and researchers who wish to understand the economic forces governing cross-listed firms' financial disclosure behavior.
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