XiaoGang Bi
University of Nottingham
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Publication
Featured researches published by XiaoGang Bi.
Review of Accounting and Finance | 2017
Agyenim Boateng; Huifen Cai; Daniel Borgia; XiaoGang Bi; Franklin Ngwu
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to examine the effects of internal corporate governance mechanisms on the capital structure decisions of Chinese-listed firms. Design/methodology/approach - Using a large and more recent data set consisting of 2,386 Chinese-listed firms over the period from 1998 to 2012, the authors use different statistical methods (OLS, fixed effects and system GMM) to analyse the effects of firm-specific and corporate governance influences on capital structure. Findings - The authors find that the proportion of independent directors and ownership concentration exert significant influence on the level of Chinese long-term debt ratios after controlling for firm-specific determinants and split share reforms. Further analysis separating the sample of this paper into state-owned enterprises (SOEs) and privately owned enterprises (POEs) suggests that ownership concentration in the hands of the state leads to decrease in debt ratios. Research limitations/implications - The finding implies that concentrated ownership in the hands of the state appears more efficient compared to their private counterparts in their monitoring role. Originality/value - This paper extends prior literature, which has concentrated disproportionately on firm-specific influences on capital structure, to the effects of within-firm governance mechanisms on capital structure decisions. The paper contributes to the agency theory–capital structure discourse in an emerging country context where corporate governance system appears weak.
Procedia. Economics and finance | 2014
XiaoGang Bi; Danni Wang
In developing capital markets dominated by individual investors, there is a potential for greater disparity in the interests of institutional investors and controlling shareholders and this has implications for the trading and monitoring activities of institutional investors in these markets, particularly around high impact corporate decisions. We examine the trading activities of mutual funds (as the largest institutional investor in this market) in corporate acquisition activities where there is potential for a wide disparity of interest between institutional investors and controlling shareholders. We find that Top Mutual Fund Management Company (TFC) have strong incentives to trade and realize profits over the event months for fear of price drop due to the mean reversion and herding effect in Chinese capital market.
Journal of Consumer Behaviour | 2012
XiaoGang Bi; Sailesh Gunessee; Robert Hoffmann; Wendy Hui; Jeremy Larner; Qing‐Ping Ma; Frauke Mattison Thompson
Managerial and Decision Economics | 2014
Agyenim Boateng; XiaoGang Bi
Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting | 2017
Agyenim Boateng; XiaoGang Bi; Sanjukta Brahma
International Review of Financial Analysis | 2018
XiaoGang Bi; Danni Wang
International Journal of Finance & Economics | 2018
XiaoGang Bi; Danni Wang
Archive | 2012
XiaoGang Bi; Qing Ping Ma
Journal of Consumer Behaviour | 2012
XiaoGang Bi; Saileshsingh Gunessee; Robert Hoffmann; Jeremy Larner; Wendy Hui; Qing‐Ping Ma; Frauke Mattison Thompson
Journal of Consumer Behaviour | 2012
XiaoGang Bi; Sailesh Gunessee; Robert Hoffmann; Wendy Hui; Jeremy Larner; Qing‐Ping Ma; Frauke Mattison Thompson