Abstract

Financial performance and corporate governance play an important role in financial distress in the mining sector, which is one of the most significant contributors to the Indonesian economy. This study aims to analyze the effect of corporate characteristics on financial distress (FD), which is moderated by corporate governance (audit quality), and uses the controlling variables (inflation rate and GDP). The study uses data from audited financial statements from mining sector in the Indonesia Stock Exchange for the period 2013–2018. Since the dependent variable (FD) is dichotomous, this study used a binary logistic regression model, as it is the case in many studies regarding the probability of bankruptcy filing. In line with the current study and some previous studies, leverage, efficiency (activity), market-to-book value, audit quality, and GDP affect the probability of financial distress significantly. Only liquidity and inflation do not impact FD. Besides, the moderating audit quality weakens the effect of liquidity and PBV; otherwise, it strengthens leverage and efficiency in predicting financial distress. As for managerial implications, this study concludes that corporate performance, corporate governance, and macro-risk factors affect the probability of financial distress. The authors suggest that mining firms need to pay attention to corporate governance and should watch the economic condition for business sustainability.

Highlights

  • Mining sector is one of the high-risk sectors

  • The efficiency and financial performance of mining firms are essential to contribute to the creation of real value-added to stakeholders significantly, the corporate governance factors always play a critical role in these problems (Moreno-Bromberg & Vo, 2017)

  • The study examines the impact of information ratios in financial statements on probability of financial distress

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Summary

Introduction

Mining sector is one of the high-risk sectors It is characterized by turbulent business environment, especially in commodity prices fluctuation, social-political problems, and regulation stability (Vivekananda, Achsani, & Maulana, 2019). The revenue of this sector mostly depends on global economy and Asian economic leaders like China, India, and Japan as the biggest markets for mining commodity (Haron, 2018). The efficiency and financial performance of mining firms are essential to contribute to the creation of real value-added to stakeholders significantly, the corporate governance factors always play a critical role in these problems (Moreno-Bromberg & Vo, 2017). The interplay between three factors, financial performance, corporate governance, and financial distress, is essential in mining firms because of the uncertainty of commodity prices, and regulation-political sentiments are relatively high (Jamaludin & Hashim, 2017)

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