Firm investment and bank health: Evidence from Malaysian listed firms

This paper examines the impact of bank financial health on firm investment. The firm-level data are obtained from firms that were listed on Bursa Malaysia between 2000 and 2007. This paper aims to provide additional empirical evidence based on an original paper by Fukuda, Kasuya and Nakajima (2005)....

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Published in:Jurnal Pengurusan
Main Author: Ma'In M.; Ismail A.G.; Nor A.H.S.M.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 2012
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84865190382&doi=10.17576%2fpengurusan-2012-34-05&partnerID=40&md5=2be1f1f7bb5526797a240a799472a241
id 2-s2.0-84865190382
spelling 2-s2.0-84865190382
Ma'In M.; Ismail A.G.; Nor A.H.S.M.
Firm investment and bank health: Evidence from Malaysian listed firms
2012
Jurnal Pengurusan
34

10.17576/pengurusan-2012-34-05
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84865190382&doi=10.17576%2fpengurusan-2012-34-05&partnerID=40&md5=2be1f1f7bb5526797a240a799472a241
This paper examines the impact of bank financial health on firm investment. The firm-level data are obtained from firms that were listed on Bursa Malaysia between 2000 and 2007. This paper aims to provide additional empirical evidence based on an original paper by Fukuda, Kasuya and Nakajima (2005). This paper also extends the previous literature by using unbalanced panel data methodology. In order to have a robust result, the CLS estimation method is used, instead of OLS. In measuring the bank health, this study uses the core capital ratios (CCR), risk weighted capital-adequacy ratios (RWCR) and non-performing loans (NPL) figures. The findings indicate that: first, CCR and RWCR have positive impact on investment by firms. The possible explanation is that when CCR and RWCR deteriorate, bank lending is reduced; resulting in reduced investment of firms. Second, NPLs have positive impact on firm investment. When banks' NPLs are low due to government interventions during the Asian financial crisis, investments of firms also deteriorate due to falling aggregate demand. Third, financial variables have positive impact on firm investment. This finding is consistent with previous empirical evidence which suggests that a firm is likely to have a larger investment when it has good investment opportunities.
Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
1272713
English
Article

author Ma'In M.; Ismail A.G.; Nor A.H.S.M.
spellingShingle Ma'In M.; Ismail A.G.; Nor A.H.S.M.
Firm investment and bank health: Evidence from Malaysian listed firms
author_facet Ma'In M.; Ismail A.G.; Nor A.H.S.M.
author_sort Ma'In M.; Ismail A.G.; Nor A.H.S.M.
title Firm investment and bank health: Evidence from Malaysian listed firms
title_short Firm investment and bank health: Evidence from Malaysian listed firms
title_full Firm investment and bank health: Evidence from Malaysian listed firms
title_fullStr Firm investment and bank health: Evidence from Malaysian listed firms
title_full_unstemmed Firm investment and bank health: Evidence from Malaysian listed firms
title_sort Firm investment and bank health: Evidence from Malaysian listed firms
publishDate 2012
container_title Jurnal Pengurusan
container_volume 34
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.17576/pengurusan-2012-34-05
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84865190382&doi=10.17576%2fpengurusan-2012-34-05&partnerID=40&md5=2be1f1f7bb5526797a240a799472a241
description This paper examines the impact of bank financial health on firm investment. The firm-level data are obtained from firms that were listed on Bursa Malaysia between 2000 and 2007. This paper aims to provide additional empirical evidence based on an original paper by Fukuda, Kasuya and Nakajima (2005). This paper also extends the previous literature by using unbalanced panel data methodology. In order to have a robust result, the CLS estimation method is used, instead of OLS. In measuring the bank health, this study uses the core capital ratios (CCR), risk weighted capital-adequacy ratios (RWCR) and non-performing loans (NPL) figures. The findings indicate that: first, CCR and RWCR have positive impact on investment by firms. The possible explanation is that when CCR and RWCR deteriorate, bank lending is reduced; resulting in reduced investment of firms. Second, NPLs have positive impact on firm investment. When banks' NPLs are low due to government interventions during the Asian financial crisis, investments of firms also deteriorate due to falling aggregate demand. Third, financial variables have positive impact on firm investment. This finding is consistent with previous empirical evidence which suggests that a firm is likely to have a larger investment when it has good investment opportunities.
publisher Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
issn 1272713
language English
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