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The conformance of companies listed on the Johannesburg Securities Exchange social responsibility index to the best practices in board composition11 October 2011 (has links)
M.Comm. / The study assessed the conformance of the companies listed on the Johannesburg Securities Exchange Social Responsibility Index to the best practices regarding the composition of the board and its committees. The board of directors is regarded as an effective mechanism in solving the agency problem that is caused by the separation of control and ownership. The composition of the board and its committees, particularly the strong presence of independent non-executive directors, enable the board to effectively monitor the actions of executive management which minimise the occurrence of fraud and corporate failures. Companies that subscribe to good corporate governance practices which includes the composition of the board and its committees are regarded highly by investors. The study assessed the extent to which the companies listed on the JSE SRI index conformed to the corporate governance best practices. The sample consists of the constituents of the JSE SRI Index. The study found that not all companies are conformed to the corporate governance best practices regarding the composition of the board and its committees.
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Testing the influence of herding behaviour on the Johannesburg Securities ExchangeMunetsi, Raramai Patience January 2018 (has links)
Magister Commercii - MCom / Since the discovery of herding behaviour in financial markets in the 1990s, it has become an area of interest for many investors, practitioners and scholars. Herding behaviour occurs when investors and market participants trade in the same direction during the same time period, as a result of the influence of other investors. Studies on herding behaviour have been undertaken in both the developed and developing economies and majority of these studies have confirmed the existence of herding behaviour in the stock markets. Despite its tremendous growth, the South African financial markets are not immune to such market anomaly.
Herding behaviour on the JSE was first investigated in 2002 focusing in the unit trust industry on the South African stock market. Motivated by this, this study assessed the presence of herding behaviour using the Johannesburg Securities Exchange tradable sector indices. Four indices were employed, namely Financials, Industrials and Resources and were benchmarked against the JSE All Share Index for the period from January 2007 to December 2017. The industrials index ((FINI15) constitutes of 25 largest industrial stocks by market capitalization, the financials index (FINI15) comprises of 15 largest financial stocks by market capitalization, the resources index (RESI10) which represents 10 largest resources stocks by market capitalization and lastly the FTSE/JSE All Share Index defined as a market capitalization-weighted index which is made up of 150 JSE listed companies and is the largest index in terms of size and overall value JSE. The FTSE/JSE All Share Index was used as a benchmark for investors to check how volatile an investment is.
The South African economy experienced the effects of the 2008 global financial crisis from 01 July 2007 to 31 August 2009. This study split the examination period into three categories namely before the global financial crises which was the period starting from 1 January 2007 to 30 June 2007, then the period during the global financial crisis which was from 1 July 2007 to 31 August 2009 and lastly the period after the global financial crises which was from 1 September 2009 to 31 December 2017. Apart from the diversity of the indices, the length of the examination period also had a significant influence towards the magnitude of herding behaviour on the JSE.
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Stock price reaction to dividend changes: an empirical analysis of the Johannesburg Securities ExchangeLentsoane, Enos 22 May 2012 (has links)
This paper provides an empirical analysis of the stock price behaviour of firms
listed on the Johannesburg Securities Exchange (JSE) around corporate events
relating to final cash dividend change announcements over the period 2004 to
2009. Declared for the financial year-end, final cash dividend announcements
either represent an increase, a reduction or no change relative to the previous
year’s announcement. In this paper we analyse the stock price behaviour of
firms that announced dividend reductions before and during the Global
Financial Crisis of 2007 (GFC 2007). The pre-crisis analysis focuses on
dividend reduction effects on share price during normal economic times and
crisis analysis focuses on effects during economic downturn. We refer to the
pre and during crises effects as firm-specific and systemic effects respectively.
Studies about the general effect of dividend announcements on shareholder
value are well documented; however our study is motivated by the fact that
there has not been an abundance of forthcoming research in South Africa
pertaining to how share prices have reacted to dividend reductions before and
during the GFC 2007. We employ an event study methodology in the context of
this emerging market to assess the share price behaviour to dividend
reductions. Integral to an event study methodology in the corporate context, is
the analysis of abnormal performance around the event date. Abnormal
performance is measured by employing three widely used quantitative
approaches namely, the market-adjusted, market model and the buy-and-hold
abnormal return approaches. Based on daily closing share price information
collected from iNet Bridge database, abnormal performance is calculated from
2004 to 2009 while controlling for the contemporaneous effect of earnings
announcements (earnings data collected from Bloomberg database) occurring
within 10 trading days of dividend announcement. The analysis shows that the
market reaction is not statistically significant on the announcement day and that
more negative returns occur during the pre-crisis period. Volatility of abnormal
returns is higher during the pre-crisis period. The research does not support the
Irrelevance Theory but seems to support the signalling hypothesis.
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An application of montier’s c-score to the johannesburg securities exchange: a tool for short sellingGovender, Yushavia January 2013 (has links)
One of the assumptions upon which modern portfolio theory is based is the efficient market hypothesis which postulates that market prices fully reflect all available information, which implies that an abnormal return cannot be made. Evidence has amassed in contradiction to the efficient market hypothesis as demonstrated by Jegadeesh and Titman (1993); Mohanram (2005); Montier (2009) and Piotroski, (2000). However these studies demonstrated earning an abnormal return by buying an asset as opposed to selling an asset. Evidence by Altman (2000) and Beneish, Lee and Nichols (2013) affirmed that abnormal returns may be earned by selling a declining asset. There has been no published work conducted on the South African market pertaining to an instrument that may be used to detect a decline in share price due to prior earnings manipulation, thereby providing the scope of this research.
In recent years the focus of the discipline of asset pricing has shifted away from theoretical modelling towards empirical analysis. The C-score by Montier (2008) is a binary earnings manipulation detection model, designed to identify stocks that may be shorted for an abnormal return. An exploratory study of stocks on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE) from 2002 to 2010 was conducted. Vital focus areas included the resources and industrials sector.
Results of this research prove that C-score is insufficient as a stand-alone tool for detecting shortable stocks on the JSE. Whilst negative relative returns were earned for certain holding periods of certain sectors, a consistent trend could not be isolated. / Dissertation (MBA)--University of Pretoria, 2013. / pagibs2014 / Gordon Institute of Business Science (GIBS) / MBA / Unrestricted
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Perfomance evaluation of the tracking ability and pricing efficiency of Exchange Traded Funds (ETFS) in South AfricaDaswa, Khumbudzo Ashley January 2016 (has links)
Magister Commercii - MCom / Since the listing of the Satrix 40 in November 2000, Exchange Traded Fund (ETFs) have grown to become an investment vehicle of choice amongst retail and institutional investors of the Johannesburg Securities Exchange (JSE). Albeit gaining such an enormous traction, investors' remains curious about ETFs ability to successfully replicate the movements of their target benchmark indices and also their capability to yield arbitrage profit opportunity through mispricing. In addition to that, investors are also interested to know whether ETFs as an index tracking investment vehicle are resilient in variously cycles of the economy. Motivated by this gap in the body of knowledge, this research undertakes to evaluate the tracking ability and pricing efficiency of 19 ETFs listed on the JSE over various cycles of the economy. According to Faulkner, Loewald and Makrelov (2013) South African economy experienced the effect of the 2008 global financial crisis between 1 September 2008 and 30 June 2009. For that reason, the examination period of this research is segmented into four main categories namely: full examination period which spans from the launch date of each of the ETF under review until 30 September 2015, pre-crisis period that is between the launch date and 29August 2008, crisis-period dated 1 September 2008 and 30 June 2009 and the post-crisis or the recovery phase being 1 July 2009 through 30 September 2015. The tracking ability results across all the sub-periods suggested that, on average, ETFs yields daily returns which closely resemble that of their target benchmark indices but with relatively high level of volatility. With regard to the tracking error as another tracking ability measurement, it was discovered that the ETFs under review were inadequately replicating the movements of their target benchmark indices irrespective of the economic cycle. In tandem with the evidence documented by Mateus and Rahmani (2014) from the London Stock Exchange (LSE), tracking errors were substantially high during the 2008 global financial crisis as opposed to the prior and the post crisis period. Across all the examination periods, sizeable amount of tracking error was found to be associated to the ETFs which mimics the international broad-market access underlying indices. Amongst other things, the diversity of these indices as well as the trading hours overlap between the JSE and their host market were found to be the key attributing factors. On the contrary, ETFs which replicates most liquid target benchmark indices such as the FTSE/JSE Top 40 index appeared to have lower tracking error on relative basis. In this regard, the liquidity of the FTSE/JSE Top 40 index proved to be the main attribute. Apart from the diversity or the liquidity of indices, the length of the examination period also had a significant influence towards the magnitude of tracking errors. In this instance, shorter examination period were found to be characterised by noise or volatility in the market which makes it difficult for the ETFs providers to promptly rebalance their portfolios and align them to their target benchmark indices. Over and above these factors, this research discovered that tracking errors across all the sub-periods were largely driven by management fees and daily volatility of the ETFs market prices, more especially during the crisis period. On the one hand, trading volume and the effect of dividends distribution had a negative influence towards the magnitude of tracking errors. On the question of how efficient these 19 ETFs are, the empirical findings revealed that significant deviation between the ETFs closing price and the Net Asset Value (NAV) does exist either being a discount or premium. In line with the prior work on the JSE by Charteris (2013), ETFs which mimics local based indices were found to be trading mostly on a discount to the NAV whilst the opposite was true in the case of the international broad-market access ETFs. At the same token, international broad-market access ETFs portrayed sizeable amount of premiums across all the cycles of the economy. In line with the analysis of tracking errors, such enormous premiums were mainly driven by lack of synchronicity in the trading hours between the JSE and host market wherein these ETFs target benchmark indices are listed. Empirical literature suggests that ETFs that exhibit discount and premium which fails to persist for more than one trading day are deemed to be efficiently priced since there is limited opportunity to arbitrage. On that note, this research found that mispricing of ETFs which mimics most liquid indices such as the domestic broad-market access and sectorial indices disappears within a period of one trading day. For that reason, majority of these ETFs were considered to be efficiently priced against their NAV. Contrarily, discounts and premiums exhibited by ETFs which mostly replicate style based and the international broad-market access indices appeared to be persistent even to the fifth trading day. From the attribution point of view, the complexity of these ETFs underlying indices as well as the trading hours overlap between the JSE and the host market of these indices were found to be the main drivers of such level of mispricing. In addition to that, attribution analysis through linear regression proved that transaction cost (bid-ask spread), daily volatility of the ETFs market prices as well as the impact of trading volume had a positive influence towards the existence of discounts and premiums observed across all sub-periods.
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JSE securities exchange : is there a justification for low voting shares?Gelderblom, Christo 03 1900 (has links)
A Research Report presented to the Graduate School of Business of the University of Stelienbosch in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Business Administration / Thesis (MBA)--Stellenbosch University, 2006. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: Certain companies in South Africa have dual classes of shares listed on the
JSE Securities Exchange i.e. ordinary shares and N shares.
Ordinary listed shares, nonmally holds one vote per share, are referred to as
superior voting shares. Restricted voting shares have restricted voting
benefits to the shareholders, in some cases one vote casting for thousand
shares held. Some companies have listed N shares on the JSE Securities
Exchange; these are the South African shares with restricted voting powers.
A total of 34 companies have issued low voting shares in South Africa, 2
companies started as far back as 1990. Naspers Limited is the only company
that has listed only low voting shares.
This study investigates the justification for companies issuing low voting
shares by comparing the price performance of these shares and also
investigates the justification for shares with restricted voting rights.
Tests are conducted to detenmine whether a premium is paid for South
African superior voting shares by comparing the share prices of superior
voting shares and restricted voting shares on the same day of trading on the
JSE Securities Exchange. Various parties in the South African business
community have opinions and arguments against and in favour of low voting
shares; the reasons for the issuing of low voting shares are under scrutiny.
In addition to the above mentioned tests the factors influencing the voting
premium have also been investigated. The benefits of restricted shares are
also investigated.
The results of tests conducted on dual share classes trading in South Africa
are compared with the results of similar studies on share price information of
dual share classes trading on international stock exchanges.
The findings of the study are:
Ordinary listed shares are trading at a premium comparing to restricted voting
shares, in South Africa the premium is calculated at 9.83%;
The payment of dividends to shareholders does not influence the share
premium;
The ratio of ordinary shares in relation to total shares issued does not
influence the VRP of a company;
The capitalisation of company, in other words the outstanding number of
ordinary shares valued at the market price, does not influence the voting
premium; and
Companies being controlled by families or major shareholding groups are
more likely to issue shares with restricted voting rights;
The conclusion of the study is that the limited benefits are offered to the
owners of the companies that have issued the dual classes of shares and not
to the investors' public. These owners of superior voting shares have utilised
restricted voting shares to remain in control of the companies and get access
to relative cheap investors funding.
Restricted voting shares' popularity declined to the end of 1992, the
phenomenon is consistent with demise of restricted voting shares in France / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Sommige Suid Afrikaanse genoteerde maatskappye het verskillende klasse
aandele genoteer op JSE Securities Exchange.
Daar word tel kens na gewone genoteerde aandele verwys as aandele met
superieure stem reg, die aandele sal sonder uitsondering een stem hou vir
elke uitgereikte gewone aandeel. In Suid-Afrika staan aandele met beperkte
stem reg bekend as N-aandele. Die betrokke aandele het nie dieselfde
stem reg voordele as gewone aandele nie en kan tot een stem per duisend
uitgereikte aandele dra.
'n Totaal van 34 maatskappye het beide klasse aandele genoteer, Naspers
Beperk is die enigste maatskappy wat slegs aandele met beperkte stemreg
genoteer het.
Die verhandeling ondersoek of daar enige geldige rede is vir die uitreiking van
aandele met beperkte stem reg. 'n Ondersoek word geloods deur te kyk na die
prysgedrag van die twee verskillende tipes aandele naamlik gewone en Naandele.
Die redes vir enige prysafwykings word ook ondersoek.
'n Vergelykings tussen die aandelepryse van aandele met superieure stemreg
en aandele met beperke stemreg (soos genoteer op die JSE Securities
Exchange) word gedoen om te bepaal of aandele met superieure stem reg
teen 'n premie verhandel.
Verskeie partye het argumente en opinies teen en ten gunste van die gebruik
van aandele met beperkte stemreg. die redes vir die uitreiking van aandele
met beperkte stem reg word onder die vergrootglas geplaas.
In Verdere ondersoek na die faktore wat verantwoordelik kon wees vir die
premieverskil tussen aandeelpryse van aandele met superior stemregte en
aandele met beperkte stemregte word ook gedoen. Daar word ook ondersoek
of daar enige voardele is vir die uitreik van aandele met beperkte stemreg.
Die studie sluit af met 'n vergelyking van die resultate in 'n Suid-Afrikaanse
beleggingingomgewing met die resultate van soorgelyke studies wat gedoen
is op aandeleinligting van verskeie intemasionale aandelebeurse waar
aandele met beide superieure en beperkte stem reg genoteer is.
Die bevindinge van die studie is as volg:
Gewone genoteerde aandele (aandele met superieure stemreg) soos
genoteer op die JSE Securities Exchange verhandel teen 'n premie van
9.83% oor die tydperk onder oorskou in vergelyking met aandele met
beperkte stemreg.
Die beta ling van dividende aan aandeelhouers speel geen rol op die grootte
van die pryspremie in die verhandeling van gewone genoteerde aandele en
aandele met beperkte stem reg.
Die verhouding tussen gewone aandele in verhouding to totale aandele
uitgereik speel nie 'n rol in die grote van die pryspremie nie;
Die kapitalisasie van die maatskappye, met ander word die uitstaande
gewone genoteerde aandele teen markprys, speel geen rol in die graolle van
die pryspremie nie; en
Die aandeelhouersstruktuur speel 'n ral in die uitreiking van aandele met
beperkte stemreg. Maatskappye wat beheer word deur families of graot
houermaatskappye is geneig om aandele met beperkte stemreg uit te reik.
Die gevolgtrekking van die studie is dat aandele met beperkte stemreg wei
voordele het, in die geval nie vir die breer beleggingspubliek nie maar wei vir
persone of instansies in beheer van die spesifieke maatskappye met beide
klasse aandele. Aandele met beperkte stemreg is gebruik am toegang te
verkry tot goedkoop befondsing sander am beheer van die maatskappye te
verloor.
Aandele met beperkte stemreg se gewildheid het begin afneem, nie net in
Suid-Afrika nie maar oak in Frankryk waar baie maatskappye besluil hel om
weg Ie doen mel die soort aandele.
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An investigation of the concept of independent director with specific reference to the King III Report and how companies listed on the Johannesburg Securities Exchange (JSE) apply the King III codesSeakamela, Palesa 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MBA)--University of Stellenbosch, 2011. / This study investigates the independence of non-executive directors serving on the boards of the Top 40 companies listed on the JSE based on information collected from the companies‘ annual reports. It examines the definition of an independent non-executive director and analyses whether the directors of the Top 40 companies comply with the definition of the independent non-executive directors as set out in the King III Report.
The third King Report on Governance for South Africa also known as King III Report was developed in response to the Companies Act of 2008 and the global financial crisis where the boards of directors were accused of not providing the required oversight in companies. Governments and regulatory bodies around the world were calling for the reform of laws and corporate governance codes to prevent occurrences such as the financial crisis and other corporate governance scandals. The new Companies Act mainly focuses on the duties and responsibilities of directors and their performance obligation. The King III report incorporated the amendments to the new Companies Act to ensure that companies are in line with best practice in corporate governance and that they comply with the law in terms of the Companies Act. The King code focuses on the role of non-executive directors with emphasis on the independence of directors because the role of directors is seen to be pivotal to good corporate governance.
The findings of the study show that the majority of the companies analysed comply with the definition of an independent director as outlined in the King III Report. However, there is evidence that some companies are not yet compliant in terms of the disclosure of information concerning the tenure of directors as well as the number of directorships. The non-disclosure of information pertaining to the tenure and number of directorships held by some directors makes it difficult to assess whether the directors are fully compliant or not. There is also evidence that suggests that the majority of the boards do not assess directors‘ independence for those directors who have served on the board for more than nine years. Therefore, the majority of companies do not include a review of the independence of directors. Best practice stipulates that there be an assessment of the directors‘ independence when extending the directors‘ tenure beyond the given nine-year period. The study recommends that the King Report should be decisive on issues such as the number of directorships and that it should provide guidelines for the number of directorships that directors can hold. The study shows that some of the directors in the Top 40 companies listed on the JSE currently hold too many directorships and that there is a need for more clarity in this regard. 62 Pages.
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The role and the functions of the Alternative Exchange (AltX) and its contribution to the development of the small and medium-sized enterprises (SMMEs) in South AfricaMtiki, Xolisa January 2019 (has links)
Magister Commercii - MCom / Motivated by the number of firms that migrate from the Alternative Exchange (AltX) to the
JSE main board, this research undertakes to examine the role and the functions of the AltX and
its contribution to the development of the small and medium-sized enterprises (SMMEs) in
South Africa over the period from January 2004 to December 2015. This study seeks to explore
the performance of the firms that have migrated from the AltX to the JSE main board, as well
as the attributes that contribute to a successful migration. The study emerges by computing
risk, return, risk-adjusted performance and liquidity statistics of the firms that migrated from
the AltX to the JSE main board over the period of the research since their respective listings
on the AltX. In the preliminary tests conducted in this study, the excess returns of the sample
firms were regressed against the market risk premium using ALSI as the market proxy. It is
discovered that the beta coefficients estimated by the regressions are statistically insignificant.
This indicates that the firms listed on the AltX have insignificant correlation with the firms
listed on the JSE main board. Therefore, the ALSI could not be used as a performance
benchmark for the sample firms in this research.
Subsequently, the research evaluates the market response before and after the announcement
date and the actual migration date of the firms that have migrated from the AltX to the JSE
main board. The reasons why this research investigates the impact of announcement and actual
migration separately is due to the observation that the period between announcement date and
migration date is usually more than a month and investors might have different reactions
towards these two mentioned events. Moreover, this is the first research that has investigated
the impact corporate reaction on both migration announcement date and the actual migration
date of the firms from the AltX to the JSE main board. The results reveal that there are
significant average abnormal returns and average abnormal turnovers reaction around
migration announcement date/actual migration date. The findings suggest that both the
migration announcement and actual migration of the firms from the AltX to the JSE main board
have produced significant abnormal returns.
Moreover, the research evaluates the performance of the firms that have migrated from the
AltX to the JSE main board against their comparable peers. The performance evaluation is
conducted in two folds. Firstly, the evaluation is conducted in order to assess the financial
position of the AltX sample firms before their migration to the JSE main board. Secondly, the
post migration performance evaluation is conducted in order to classify each of the sample
firms either as a success or as a failure after their migration to the JSE main board. The results
reveals that, out of 20 sample firms only 13 firms have been categorised as successful post their
migration from the AltX to the JSE main board, while the remaining 7 firms are categorised as
unsuccessful post migration.
Finally, this research investigates the attributes that differentiate the AltX firms that are likely
to be successful and those that are unlikely to be successful after their migration to the JSE
main board. To achieve this, Multivariate Discriminant Analysis (MDA) model developed by
Altman (1968) is employed. The results reveals that, the model is able to classify 90% of the
original cases and 85% of the cross-validated cases perfectly. Moreover, the model has
identified net profit margin, current ratio and return on capital invested as the most important
financial ratios in distinguishing the successful firms from unsuccessful firms post migration
from the AltX to the JSE main board. / 2021-04-30
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Portfolio optimisation using the Johannesburg Securities Exchange tradable indices : an application of the Markowitz's mean-variance frameworkHuni, Sally 08 1900 (has links)
The aim of this study was to assess the feasibility of constructing optimal portfolios using the Johannesburg Securities Exchange tradable sector indices. Three indices were employed, namely Financials, Industrials and Resources and were benchmarked against the JSE All Share Index for the period January 2007 to December 2017. The period was split into three, namely before the 2007-2009 global financial crises, during the global financial crises and after the global financial crises. The Markowitz’s mean-variance optimisation framework was employed for the construction of global mean variance portfolios. The results of this study showed that it was feasible to construct mean-variance efficient portfolios using tradable sector indices from the Johannesburg Securities Exchange. It was also established that, on the other hand, global mean variance portfolios constructed in this study, outperformed the benchmark index in a bullish market in terms of the risk-return combinations. On the other hand, in bear markets, the global mean variance portfolios were observed to perform better than the benchmark index in terms of risk. Further, the results of the study showed that portfolios constructed from the three tradable indices yielded diversification benefits despite their positive correlation with each other. The results of the study corroborate the findings by other scholars that the mean-variance optimisation framework is effective in the construction of optimal portfolios using the Johannesburg Securities Exchange. The study also demonstrated that Markowitz’s mean-variance framework could be applied by investors faced with a plethora of investment choices to construct efficient portfolios utilising the Johannesburg Securities Exchange tradable sector indices to achieve returns commensurate with their risk preferences. / Business Management / M. Com. (Business Management)
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Impact of working capital management on the performance of non-financial firms listed on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE)Oseifuah, Emmanuel K. 18 May 2018 (has links)
PhD (Economics) / Department of Economics / This is the first study to investigate the impact of working capital management on the performance (profitability and value) of South African firms listed on the Johannesburg Securities Exchange (JSE) before, during and after the 2008/2009 global financial crisis. Richards and Laughlin’s (1980) Cash Conversion Cycle (CCC) theory was used as the theoretical framework for analysing and linking working capital management to firm performance. In addition, the study investigates how the separate working capital management components impact the performance of firms. The study used both accounting and market based secondary data obtained from I-Net Bridge/BFA McGregor database and the JSE for 75 firms for the 10 year period, 2003 to 2012. Panel data regression models were used in the analyses.
The key findings from the study indicate the following. First, the average profitability (ROA) for the sample firms decreased from 27% (before the financial crisis) to 20.2% during the crisis period and increased to 25.9% after the financial crisis. Second, the average market capitalisation (firm value) decreased from R18.9 billion before the crisis to R16.3 billion during the crisis period, and thereafter increased to a high of R24.4 billion after the crisis. Third, the average firm’s CCC was 28.4 days before the crisis and decreased to 12.5 days during the crisis period and later increased to 16.2 days after the crisis. Fourth, and interestingly, of the four working capital management variables, only accounts receivable conversion period is significantly negatively related to profitability during the financial crisis. Fifth, the three firm-specific variables (size, financial leverage, and current assets to total assets ratio) have no significant relation with profitability during the crisis period. Sixth, the external variable, change in GDP growth rate, has a significant positive relation with profitability. This suggests firms perform better when the economy is booming and otherwise during economic downturns, which is consistent with economic theory. Finally, and perhaps the most important contribution is that the study found an inverted U-shape relationship between working capital management (proxied by cash conversion cycle) and firm value before the crisis. This implies that there exists an optimal level of investment in working
capital for which the sampled firms’ value is maximized. At this point, costs and benefits are balanced. Thus corporate managers should aim to keep as close to the optimal level as possible and try to avoid any deviations from it that destroy firm value. On the contrary, the results have not established any such relationship between working capital management and profitability for any of the three financial crisis periods. Based on the findings, it is recommended that firm managers should aim at keeping as close to the optimal working capital level as possible and try to avoid any deviations from it that may destroy firm value. / NRF
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