Abstract

PurposeThis paper aims to examine the relationship between different types of shareholders that command share ownership, family, institutions or external blockholders and earnings management. In addition, it examines the effect of company size on earnings management.Design/methodology/approachThe sample includes 67 companies listed in the Mexican Stock Exchange for the period 2005-2015. The sample composition is quite industry-balanced. A cross-sectional version of the Jones model (1991) is to measure the earnings management. The GMM (generalized method of moments) model is also estimated.FindingsThe results show that family and institutional ownership reduce the earnings management, but the impact is different depending on the company size.Research limitations/implicationsThe results show that there is a clear relationship between increasing participation of family and institutional investors and a reduction in earnings management. This is consistent with the literature that establishes that ownership is an effective regulatory mechanism that limits earnings management through closer supervision and involvement in management.Practical/implicationsFor companies’ corporate governance and regulatory authorities, the results of this study may serve to improve the decision-making.Originality/valueThis study shows that ownership structure can provide corporate governance in Mexican listed companies with different monitoring and control capacities to influence companies’ strategies, particularly in relation to the discretion of earnings management.

Highlights

  • The financial crisis in 2009 generated a vast body of research on the quality of financial information submitted by public companies and the critical role that corporate governance plays as a control mechanism

  • The results show that there is a clear relationship between an increasing participation of family and institutional investors, and a reduction in earnings management

  • This is consistent with the literature that establishes that ownership is an effective regulatory mechanism that limits earnings management through closer supervision and involvement in management

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Summary

Introduction

The financial crisis in 2009 generated a vast body of research on the quality of financial information submitted by public companies and the critical role that corporate governance plays as a control mechanism Published in Journal of Economics, Finance and Administrative Science. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode

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