scholarly journals Exploring the nonlinear effect of conditional conservatism on the cost of equity capital: Evidence from emerging markets

Author(s):  
Maha Khalifa ◽  
Haykel Zouaoui ◽  
Hakim Ben Othman ◽  
Khaled Hussainey
2015 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 69 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gary C. Biddle ◽  
Mary L. Z. Ma ◽  
Feng Wu

Prior studies report negative or insignificant relations between conditional conservatism and the cost of equity capital, arguing that conservatism reduces information risk. Using accounting-based conditional conservatism proxies, however, we find a significantly positive association between conditional conservatism and the cost of equity. This positive relation operates via improving information precision about negative earnings shocks and generally inflating information asymmetry among investors, both of which increase the cost of equity. We further find that the cost of equity effect of conditional conservatism disappears in the period after the enactment of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act (SOX), consistent with the notion that nationwide improvement of information precision about negative news and diminished information asymmetry are engendered by the SOX regulation. This study adds to researches on conditional conservatism, SOX, and the cost of equity, and also has policy implications.


2010 ◽  
Vol 15 (28) ◽  
pp. 7-43
Author(s):  
Darcy Fuenzalida ◽  
◽  
Samuel Mongrut ◽  

This paper compares the main proposals that have been made in order to estimate discount rates in emerging markets. Seven methods are used to estimate the cost of equity capital in the case of global well-diversified investors; two methods are used to estimate it in the case of imperfectly diversified local institutional investors; and one method is used to estimate the required return in the case of non-diversified entrepreneurs. Using the first nine methods, one estimates the costs of equity for all economic sectors in six Latin American emerging markets. Consistently with studies applied to other regions, a great deal of disparity is observed between the discount rates obtained across the different models, which implies that no model is better than the others. Likewise, the paper shows that Latin American markets are in a process of becoming more integrated with the world market because discount rates have decreased consistently during the first five-year period of the XXI Century. Finally, one identifies several challenges that have to be tackled to estimate discount rates and valuate investment opportunities in emerging markets.


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