Abstract:
Present study investigates the impact of two monitoring mechanisms; family ownership, and
financial reporting quality with other explanatory variables on investment efficiency for the
period of 2007 to 2014 for non-financial listed companies at the Karachi Stock Exchange.
This study employs two dimensional Pooled Ordinary Least Square Regression, Two Stage
Least Square Regression (2SLS), and Generalized Method of Moment (GMM), Feasible
Generalized Least Square Regression (FGLS) method to test and examine the significance of
hypothesis. The results indicate that higher financial reporting quality and family ownership
is associated with higher investment efficiency. Furthermore, the moderation effect of family
ownership on the relationship of financial reporting quality and investment efficiency
indicate that impact of financial reporting quality on investment efficiency is higher for
family owned business as compare to the impact of financial reporting quality on investment
efficiency for non-family owned business. The results also show that higher financial
reporting quality mitigates the problem of over and under investment as information gap
reduces. The results reveal that family ownership increases investment efficiency and may
also mitigate the over and under investment problem. The family firms and higher financial
reporting quality reduce the tendency of over-investment and under-investment. Therefore,
alignment effect outreaches the entrenchment effect as family shareholder and management
shares the same vision and have same long-run investment horizon. The desire to shift
business to their next generation is possible if family firms invest in efficient projects,
therefore, family firms have more efficient investments as compared to non-family firms.
Therefore, in emerging market like Pakistan alignment effect, reduced information
asymmetry, efficient monitoring, and long term horizon, and the preservation of socioemotional
wealth reduce the propensity of under investment in family firms as compared to
ii i
non-family firms. The results indicate that family firm in Pakistan use accrual based earning
management in order to meet their earning targets. In addition, they have lesser propensity to
engage in real based earning management as real based earning management is hard to detect
for the regulating bodies. In longer run, real based earning management can damage the
business, therefore, family firm has lesser engagement in real based earning management in
order to maintain their socio-emotional wealth perspective. The family firms report lower
abnormal discretionary expanses, abnormal cash flow from operations and lower abnormal
production as compare to non-family firms.. The main findings of this study are almost the
same by using different estimation techniques and proxies to measure investment efficiency,
family ownership and financial reporting quality. The implication that emerges from these
results is that financial reporting quality and family ownership act as a corporate governance
mechanism tool that enhances the investment efficiency of family firms as compared to nonfamily
firms and also mitigate the over and under-investment problem in any family owned
business. Thus, the results support the argument presented by the alignment hypothesis of
Agency Theory and dynasty succession dimension of Socio-emotional Wealth Theory.
Therefore, understanding the quality of these financial reports in family owned business
allows investors, regulatory authorities and policy makers to make informed decision.
Keywords: Family Ownership, Investment efficiency, Financial Reporting Quality