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Journal ArticleDOI

Foreign institutional ownership and stock market liquidity: Evidence from Indonesia.

TLDR
In this paper, the authors examined the Granger causality between foreign institutional ownership and liquidity in the Indonesian stock market and found that foreign ownership has a negative impact on future liquidity, which is consistent with the negative impact of institutional investor ownership in developed markets.
Abstract
From January 2002 to August 2007, foreign institutions held almost 70% of the free-float value of the Indonesian equity market, or 41% of the total market capitalization. Over the same period, liquidity on the Jakarta Stock Exchange improved substantially with the average bid–ask spread more than halved and the average depth more than doubled. In this study we examine the Granger causality between foreign institutional ownership and liquidity, while controlling for persistence in foreign ownership and liquidity measures. We find that foreign holdings have a negative impact on future liquidity: a 10% increase in foreign institutional ownership in the current month is associated with approximately 2% increase in the bid–ask spread, 3% decrease in depth, and 4% rise in price sensitivity in the next month, challenging the view that foreign institutions enhance liquidity in small emerging markets. Our findings are consistent with the negative liquidity impact of institutional investor ownership in developed markets.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Distribution of institutional ownership and corporate firm performance.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the association between corporate firm performance and the level and stability of institutional ownership within a simultaneous equation model and find that stable shareholding of each group has a positive impact on performance, with the first group exerting a larger effect.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exploring the causality links between financial markets and foreign direct investment in Africa

TL;DR: In this article, the causality links between financial markets and foreign direct investment (FDI) in Africa were explored using proxies for the banking sector and stock market to capture financial market development.
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Large foreign ownership and stock price informativeness around the world

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the relation between large foreign ownership and the informativeness of stock prices in 40 markets and found that LFO is positively related to price informativity, measured by probability of informed trading ( PIN ) and price non-synchronicity ( NONSYNC ).
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Foreign Investor Heterogeneity and Stock Liquidity around the World

Abstract: This article examines whether foreign investor heterogeneity plays a role in stock liquidity in a sample of 27,828 firms from thirty-nine countries worldwide. Foreign direct ownership is negatively associated with stock liquidity, while foreign portfolio ownership is positively associated with stock liquidity. Consistent with theoretical predictions, foreign ownership explains stock liquidity through both trading activity and information channels. The value-enhancing benefits of foreign direct investors’ monitoring efforts outweigh their liquidity costs and high adverse selection premium. However, the positive impact of foreign portfolio ownership on firm performance becomes negative and is not robustly significant after controlling for liquidity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dividends, leverage, and family ownership in the emerging Indonesian market

TL;DR: In this paper, the roles of dividends and leverage to mitigate agency problems within family firms in Indonesia were examined using simultaneous equations, and the authors found a significant negative association between family ownership and dividend payout and a two-way negative relation between dividend payoff and leverage.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Continuous Auctions and Insider Trading

Albert S. Kyle
- 01 Nov 1985 - 
Journal ArticleDOI

Illiquidity and stock returns: cross-section and time-series effects $

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that expected market illiquidity positively affects ex ante stock excess return, suggesting that expected stock ex ante excess return partly represents an illiquid price premium, which complements the cross-sectional positive return-illiquidity relationship.
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Foreign Speculators and Emerging Equity Markets

TL;DR: In this article, a cross-sectional time-series model is proposed to assess the impact of market liberalization in emerging equity markets on the cost of capital, volatility, beta, and correlation with world market returns.
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A New Estimate of Transaction Costs

TL;DR: Lesmond et al. as discussed by the authors presented a model that requires only the time series of daily security returns to endogenously estimate the effective transaction costs for any firm, exchange, or time period.
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The investment behavior and performance of various investor types: a study of Finland's unique data set

TL;DR: In this article, the extent to which past returns determine the propensity to buy and sell was analyzed using data from Finland, and it was shown that foreign investors tend to be momentum investors, buying past winning stocks and selling past losers.
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