Abstract

PurposeIn view of organizational inertia, with the occurrence of a major event, though resource rigidity minimizes, however simultaneously, it increases process rigidity, which creates difficulties in motivating managers and dealing with the agency problem. Therefore, keeping in mind the high demand created by the China–Pakistan Economic Corridor and Naya Pakistan Housing Scheme in the cement sector of Pakistan, the purpose of this paper is to investigate the impact of corporate governance (CG) on the cost of equity (COE) in the cement sector, to deal with the problems surging during and after the completion of these projects and highlight further opportunities for the cement sector of Pakistan.Design/methodology/approachCG is a qualitative concept therefore, eight proxies have been used to measure it along with the two control variables. This study uses balance panel data of six years from 2012 to 2017, collected from 18 companies of the cement sector of Pakistan. Descriptive statistics have been used to describe the data, correlation matrix to see the nature of the relationship, and Pooled OLS as the estimation technique, while to analyze the data a statistical package 13 has been used. To measure the COE, the Capital Asset Pricing Model (CAPM) has been used.FindingsRegression results suggest that block ownership, insider ownership and the board size are insignificant, while CEO tenure is negatively and significantly associated with the COE. Non-executive directors, independence and CEO duality are insignificant; however, diversity is positively and significantly associated with the COE. Moreover, the mean value of the COE is 8.22 percent for the cement sector, while the coefficient of determination of the model under study is 74 percent.Research limitations/implicationsThis paper is based on the data from the cement sector of Pakistan only. Therefore, this is the reason that these results cannot be generalized on the whole economy of Pakistan.Practical implicationsThis study helps in finding out the COE value specific to the cement sector, which will help this sector to evaluate the capital budgeting decision more precisely and accurately than before. Moreover, the association of diversity as positive, while independence as negative with the COE highlights a room for improvement in the implementation of CG codes by SECP. This study also helps to mitigate the impact of inertia, the after-effects of high demand, and managing the agency problem in the cement sector.Originality/valueThis is the first study using CG data collected just after the revised promulgation of CG codes in 2012, along with a wide range of eight proxies measuring CG and its impact on the COE in the cement sector.

Highlights

  • This study investigates the impact of corporate governance (CG) on the cost of equity (COE) in cement sector’s enterprises, listed on Pakistan stock exchange for a sample period of 2012–2017

  • This study examines the relationship between the quality of CG and COE in cement sector firms, listed at Pakistan stock exchange

  • Regression results suggest that block ownership, inside ownership, the board size, CEO tenure and firm size (FS) are negatively related to cost equity in cement sector of Pakistan, while non-executive directors (NED), independent NEDs, female directors, duality and leverage all have positive impact on the COE

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Summary

Introduction

This study investigates the impact of corporate governance (CG) on the cost of equity (COE) in cement sector’s enterprises, listed on Pakistan stock exchange for a sample period of 2012–2017. To overcome the agency problem, there are two practical methods, one is the incentive mechanism, and the other is a monitoring mechanism. There was a need felt by researchers to examine the impact of the quality of CG on firm performance by taking the COE, cost capital and cost of debt as an indirect proxy for performance. There are few studies that investigated the impact of CG on the COE (Adiputra et al, 2017; Chen et al, 2009; Huang et al, 2009; Ramly, 2012; Regalli and Soana, 2012; Shah and Butt, 2009; Srivastava et al, 2019; Sukhahuta et al, 2016; Zhu, 2012). Regalli and Soana (2012) and Shah and Butt (2009) found some contradicting pieces of evidence and stated that increasing the quality of CG increases the COE

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