You are on page 1of 29

ARTICLE IN PRESS

Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439


www.elsevier.com/locate/jfec

Political relationships, global nancing, and


corporate transparency: Evidence from Indonesia$
Christian Leuza,, Felix Oberholzer-Geeb
a
The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA
b
Harvard Business School, Harvard University, Boston, MA 02163, USA
Received 8 September 2003; received in revised form 4 May 2005; accepted 22 June 2005
Available online 20 February 2006

Abstract

This study examines the role of political connections in rms nancing strategies and their long-
run performance. We view political connections as an example for domestic arrangements which can
reduce the benets of global nancing. Using data from Indonesia, we nd that rms with strong
political connections are less likely to have publicly traded foreign securities. As a result, estimates of
the performance consequences of foreign nancing are severely biased if value-creating domestic
arrangements such as political relationships are ignored. Connections not only alter rms nancing
strategies, they also inuence long-run performance. Tracking returns across several regimes, we
show that rms have difculty re-establishing connections with a new government when their patron

$
We thank two anonymous reviewers, Michael Backman, Phil Berger, Jack Coffee, Alexander Dyck, Mara
Faccio, Ray Fisman, Tarun Khanna, Greg Miller, Todd Mitton, DJ Nanda, Jordan Siegel, Benny Tabalujan,
Ross Watts, Greg Waymire, Peter Wysocki, and Jerry Zimmerman, as well as seminar participants at the AEA
Annual Meeting, Chinese University of Hong Kong, EAA Annual Meeting, Harvard Business School, Norwegian
School of Economics and Business, Singapore Management University, Stanford Summer Camp, University of
Rochester, Stockholm University, and the Wharton School for helpful comments. We are grateful to Simeon
Djankow and Ray Fisman for sharing data. Arief Budiman, Shanshan Cao, Bryan Chao, Christina Hsiung Chen,
Robert Irwan, Randy Jusuf, Ian Lin, Svetlana Ni, and Julie Wong provided excellent research assistance. The
generous nancial support of the WhartonSingapore Management University Research Center and the Baker
Foundation is gratefully acknowledged.
Corresponding author. Tel.: +1 215 898 2610; fax: +1 215 573 2054.
E-mail address: leuz@wharton.upenn.edu (C. Leuz).

0304-405X/$ - see front matter r 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
doi:10.1016/j.jneco.2005.06.006
ARTICLE IN PRESS
412 C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439

falls from power, leading closely connected rms to underperform under the new regime and
subsequently to increase their foreign nancing.
r 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

JEL Classifications: P16; G32; G38; K22; K42; M41; G18

Keywords: Cross listing; Financing choices; Emerging markets; Asian nancial crisis; Indonesia; Disclosure

1. Introduction

Political connections are believed to be a valuable resource for many rms (Fisman,
2001), but there are only a handful of studies that document how such connections impact
rms strategic choices and their long-run nancial performance (Faccio, 2002; Johnson
and Mitton, 2003). Studying the performance consequences of political ties is of particular
interest because these ties are often inconsistent with other value-creating business
strategies. Moreover, the performance of closely connected rms might vary dramatically
over time depending on the political fortunes of their backers, suggesting that connection-
based strategies could be particularly risky. In this study, we analyze how closely
connected rms make strategic decisions and how these decisions affect their long-run
nancial performance.
In the rst part of the paper, we examine the link between political ties and rms global
nancing strategies. We are interested in this link because foreign capital has become an
increasingly important source of nance for rms in emerging markets (e.g., Karolyi, 1998;
Bekaert et al., 2002). Empirical studies nd that companies that access global capital
markets experience substantial benets. For instance, rms with U.S. cross-listings enjoy a
lower cost of capital, improved visibility and reputation, and better growth opportunities
(e.g., Errunza and Miller, 2000; Doidge et al., 2004; Hail and Leuz, 2004).
Taking these benets at face value, it is difcult to understand why only a minority of
companies access foreign capital markets. A core idea in this paper is that domestic
opportunities signicantly reduce the net benets of foreign securities for some rms. For
instance, rms with political ties often receive cheap loans from state-owned banks
(Faccio, 2002; Wiwattanakantang et al., 2006), so they do not need to tap into foreign
capital markets. It is also possible that global nancing imposes extra costs on
closely connected rms because the decision to cross-list shares on foreign exchanges
often forces rms to adapt to the regulations that govern these markets (Coffee, 2002;
Reese and Weisbach, 2002; Siegel, 2005). If minority shareholders are better protected
abroad, issuing foreign securities becomes expensive for controlling owners accustomed
to exploiting domestic investors. Similarly, rms with foreign securities attract the
attention of foreign analysts and the international business press (Baker et al., 2002;
Lang et al., 2003). However, high levels of public scrutiny can be difcult to reconcile
with political favors of often dubious legality. These hidden costs of foreign nancing
can perhaps explain why few companies nance themselves globally despite the apparent
benets of doing so. While this study is focused on political connections, we believe
the hidden costs of global nancing to be signicant in many contexts. Political patronage
is just one example of domestic arrangements that reduce the net benets of having
foreign securities.
ARTICLE IN PRESS
C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439 413

We examine the link between political connections and global nancing using
Indonesian data. Indonesias crony capitalism under former President Suharto provides
a particularly suitable setting for examining the role of connections for rms foreign
nancing choices. There is ample evidence that political connections were particularly
valuable under the Suharto regime and often involved access to nance (Borsuk, 1993;
McBeth, 1994; Fisman, 2001). Moreover, Indonesia has low levels of mandatory
disclosure, suggesting that publicly traded foreign securities have substantial informational
consequences. Finally, the Asian nancial crisis and subsequent regime changes provide
shocks that we can exploit in assessing the performance consequences of foreign nancing
and political connections.
Our results provide strong support for the view that foreign securities and close political
connections are substitutes. Firms that were close to the Suharto regime were signicantly
less likely to have publicly traded securities abroad. These ndings hold after controlling
for rm size, nancial leverage, protability, and industry characteristics. We carefully test
for the possibility that our ndings are due to unobserved heterogeneity among the sample
rms. Using an instrumental-variable strategy, our closeness measure does not appear to
be endogenous to the choice of foreign securities. We also demonstrate that our results are
robust to alternative proxies for political connections and are not driven by company
differences in volatility, susceptibility to bad news, dependence on external nancing, or
exposure to foreign product markets.
Our nding that political relationships inuence the likelihood of global nancing has
important implications for studies estimating the performance effects of foreign securities.
Recent papers show that Asian rms with foreign securities, higher-quality disclosures, and
less problematic ownership structures exhibit signicantly higher returns during the Asian
nancial crisis (Johnson et al., 2000; Mitton, 2002; Lemmon and Lins, 2003; Baek et al.,
2004). However, if domestic sources of rm value are omitted from these analyses, the
resulting estimates are likely to be biased. In a re-analysis of returns during the crisis, we do
indeed nd signicant bias in simple performance regressions that fail to control for
political connections. Conceptually, this bias provides empirical evidence that, during the
crisis, President Suharto was propping up rms that were close to his regime.1 The analysis
also illustrates why it is important to consider the endogeneity of foreign nancing
decisions and hence rms domestic opportunities when estimating performance benets.
The second part of the paper is concerned with the long-run consequences of
investments in political relationships. Unlike many other resources at the rms disposal,
political connections can lose their value overnight when the government fails to win an
election, suggesting that investments in political relationships might be particularly risky.
On the other hand, many formal models of political economy assume that politicians
auction off favors to rms with the highest willingness to pay for political patronage
(Bernheim and Whinston, 1986). Under this view, well-connected managers can easily re-
build their relationships once a regime has changed, and regime changes have little effect
on long-run rm performance.

1
While empirical support for propping is still rare, there is ample anecdotal evidence that Suharto tried to
protect well-connected rms. For example, the Texmaco group received loans in excess of US$ 1 billion from
Bank Negara Indonesia, one of Indonesias largest state banks. The loans far exceeded the banks legal lending
limit, but were approved by Suharto as a means to prop up the conglomerate after the Asian nancial crisis.
Texmacos founder, Marimutu Sinivasan, is said to be a long-time friend of President Suharto (Solomon, 1999).
ARTICLE IN PRESS
414 C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439

Indonesia provides ample opportunity to study the performance consequences of


regime changes. After the long-lived Suharto regime and its sudden demise on 21 May
1998, President Habibie, a long-time Suharto ally, took ofce. In October 1999,
Habibie was replaced by President Wahid, a cleric critical of the Suharto regime
(Symonds, 1998). These regime changes allow us to study both a friendly transition,
when Suhartos protege Habibie came to power, and the inauguration of the Wahid
government which treated the Suharto cronies less favorably. Studying the nancial
consequences of such changes, we nd that rms closely connected to Suharto
underperformed during the Asian nancial crisis as long as Suharto was in power;
recovered under Habibie; but signicantly underperformed once Wahid took ofce. This
pattern of changes in long-run nancial performance suggests that it was not easy for
companies connected to the Suharto regime to establish close connections with the new
and less friendly Wahid government.
If the empirical regularity documented in the rst part of this studythat closely
connected rms shy away from global nancingholds generally, Suharto rms should
have found it more attractive to nance their operations globally once Wahid came to
power. In an empirical analysis of the Wahid period, we document that former Suharto
cronies became more inclined to issue foreign securities. This set of results has important
implications for the consequences of nancial liberalization because it suggests that there
are important complementarities between capital market liberalization and political
reform (Chui et al., 2000; Stulz, 2005). Firms closely connected with the Suharto regime
chose not to access global capital markets because the benets of global nancing
remained small for these rms as long as they beneted from political connections. Once
the connections had lost their value, raising capital abroad became more attractive.
Changes in nancing strategies reect changes in the domestic opportunities that rms
must forgo when they issue foreign securities.
This paper contributes to the literature on global nancing and the benets of
cross-listing by developing a more complete model of nancing choices (e.g., Saudagaran,
1988; Saudagaran and Biddle, 1995; Karolyi, 1998; Doidge et al., 2004). An appealing
feature of this model is that it is easier to understand why the vast majority of large
rms do not access global capital markets even though the group of globally nanced
companies experiences substantial benets. Our study also complements the literature
on the importance of political connections by documenting that close political ties
have important consequences for rm strategy and performance (Stigler, 1971; Kroszner
and Strahan, 1999; Baron, 2001; Faccio, 2002; Johnson and Mitton, 2003; Friedman
et al., 2003). Political ties affect rm performance in two ways. In the short run, rms
with close connections underperformed during the Asian nancial crisis. In the long
run, investments in political relationships stopped paying off because a new, less
friendly government came to power. Investments in political ties, we conclude, are
less likely to be a source of long-term value in environments with macroeconomic and
political instability.
The paper is organized as follows. Section 2 describes the institutional setting of this
study. Section 3 explains the sample and the data. In Section 4, we present the main results
for rms foreign nancing decisions. Section 5 explores whether our results are specic to
the type of foreign security that we study. In Section 6, we analyze the performance effects
of foreign securities. In Section 7, we explore the dynamics of political connections, and
Section 8 concludes the paper.
ARTICLE IN PRESS
C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439 415

2. Institutional setting

A key premise of our approach is the idea that political connections constitute a source
of rm value. There is empirical evidence supporting this view, both for Indonesia
(Fisman, 2001) and for a larger set of economies. For instance, connected rms pay lower
taxes and have larger market shares (Faccio, 2002). In Indonesia, the Suharto regime often
arranged preferential nancing for well-connected rms (so-called memo-lending). An
example from the early 1990s is Golden Key, a little-known chemical and manufacturing
group, which received an unsecured loan of $430 million from the state-owned Bank
Pembangunan Indonesia. Court proceedings subsequently revealed that Hutomo Mandala
Putra, the youngest son of President Suharto, was an early investor in Golden Key and had
introduced the rm to bank ofcials who approved the loan at neck-breaking speed
(McBeth, 1994). Similarly, the Barito Pacic group received huge loans from state banks
prior to the Asian nancial crisis. Political connections were widely cited as the reason
behind the state banks generosity (Borsuk, 1993).
The benets of political connections are not conned to debt nancing. Barito Pacics
1993 Indonesian stock offering, for instance, was greatly helped by the state civil service
pension fund acquiring a 20% stake. Barito denied allegations that it needed the pension
funds entry to shore up the company before it could go public, but analysts noted that
the funds investment substantially boosted the companys capital (Borsuk, 1993). A
further source of value for politically well-connected rms is the granting of important
licenses. The Salim Group, one of the largest Indonesian conglomerates, had very close ties
to President Suharto and was awarded lucrative franchises in banking, our milling, and
telecommunications (Shari, 1998). These anecdotes illustrate that political connections are
a way to obtain low-cost nancing and other economic advantages.
An alternative strategy to increase rm value is to access foreign capital markets. The
issuance of foreign securities can lower the cost of capital, help overcome the obstacles of
segmented markets (Stulz, 1981, 1999; Errunza and Miller, 2000), and increase the rms
value by fostering its recognition among analysts and investors (Merton, 1987; Lang et al.,
2003). Some authors have also argued that U.S. cross-listings improve corporate
transparency, investor protection, and hence the value of the rm to outsiders. This claim
is the subject of an ongoing debate.2 Coffee (1999, 2002), Mitton (2002), Reese and
Weisbach (2002), and Doidge et al. (2004) argue in favor of the hypothesis. Fanto (1996),
La Porta et al. (2000), Licht (2001), and Siegel (2005) are more skeptical.
In assessing the performance and governance effects of global nancing strategies, it is
important to understand why rms choose to issue foreign securities. The incentives to do
so depend in part on the relation between the value of access to foreign capital markets and
rms political relationships. A priori, it is not obvious whether rms with strong political
connections are more or less likely to access global capital markets. As close political ties
afford more attractive business opportunities, closely connected, fast-growing rms with a
high demand for capital might nd it particularly attractive to tap into foreign markets.
Well-connected rms might also be the most interesting investment opportunities for

2
Our analysis highlights that domestic opportunities, such as political connections, are important when
estimating the benets of legal bonding, but it does not contradict or support the bonding hypothesis. We also do
not analyze whether politically connected rms are more or less likely to expropriate outside shareholders, which
is a separate issue (see Cheung et al., 2005, for the link between connections and expropriation).
ARTICLE IN PRESS
416 C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439

foreign investors. These arguments suggest that close political ties and access to foreign
capital markets are complements.
On the other hand, there appear to be equally valid reasons to believe that rms with
stronger political relationships are less likely to raise capital globally. Low-cost nancing
from state-owned banks makes it less attractive to tap into foreign markets, and the
additional scrutiny that comes with publicly traded foreign securities could be particularly
costly to rms with close political ties. Moreover, high levels of transparency and public
attention might expose political favors of questionable legality. For instance, rms in
weakly regulated markets are often free to engage in undisclosed related-party transactions
beneting controlling insiders and political backers. Transactions of this type would have
to be reported if the rms securities trade on a major U.S. exchange. These arguments
suggest that political connections and global nancing are substitutes. In view of the
conicting arguments, the relation between rms nancing strategies and their political
connections is ultimately an empirical question.
To examine this question, we analyze the likelihood of Indonesian rms having publicly
traded foreign debt or equity securities. We focus on publicly traded securities because they
are likely to subject rms to additional scrutiny by foreign investors, nancial analysts, and
the business press. We also study which rms have debt or equity securities traded on
major U.S. exchanges, such as NYSE or NASDAQ. Firms with exchange-traded securities
have to le Form 20-F with the SEC, which requires extensive disclosures (e.g., on related-
party transactions) and a reconciliation of foreign nancial statements to U.S. GAAP.
By virtue of ling with the SEC, rms are also subject to SEC enforcement, legal
threats from shareholders, and the provisions of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, under
which most SEC enforcement actions are brought (Coffee, 2002; Siegel, 2005; Karpoff
et al., 2005).
Having gained a better understanding of the tradeoff between political relationships and
foreign nancing, we turn to the performance consequences of these strategic choices. We
rst ask whether rms with foreign securities outperformed other companies during the
Asian nancial crisis. The 1997/1998 crisis is widely seen as a crisis of condence, and it is
interesting to investigate whether rms with foreign securities outperformed other
companies during this period (Mitton, 2002). Next, we look beyond the immediate crisis
to study the long-run consequences of investments in political relationships. We are
particularly interested in the performance of the Suharto cronies under President
Abdurrahman Wahid. Wahid ran on an anti-establishment platform, promising to end
cronyism in Indonesia. He ordered the arrest of Tommy Suharto, the son of the former
president, and refused to pardon Tommy when he pleaded for clemency to avoid an 18-
month prison sentence for corruption (BBC, 2000). The Wahid presidency thus affords the
opportunity to study the performance consequences of political ties when a less friendly
government comes to power.

3. Sample and data

We begin our sample construction with a worldwide search for foreign securities issued
by Indonesian rms. To compile our data, we use the databases of Datastream,
Bloomberg, Global Access, and SDC as well as the SEC lings on Edgar, lists of foreign
listings from major international stock exchanges, and the ADR lists provided by the Bank
of New York and Citibank. Based on this extensive search, we identify 22 rms with
ARTICLE IN PRESS
C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439 417

publicly traded debt and equity securities as of June 30, 1997, shortly before the beginning
of the Asian crisis. This count does not include foreign securities that are private debt
agreements or private equity placements because these arrangements allow investors to be
informed via private channels rather than through public disclosure. We separately analyze
these securities in Section 5.
Our tests require nancial statement and share price data. We obtain nancial data from
the Worldscope database for the 22 rms with foreign securities as well as all remaining
Indonesian rms covered by Worldscope in 1997. This search results in a sample of 151
rms. We hand-collect nancial information from the Indonesian Capital Market
Directory (1997) and rms annual reports if the necessary nancial data are missing in
Worldscope. We lose 13 rms because we are unable to nd share price data on
Datastream. In addition, we drop eight rms that are not traded over our sample period.
Thus, the nal sample consists of 130 rms, representing over 80% of the Indonesian
market capitalization in December 1996.
Our measure of political connections is based on Fisman (2001). His study shows that
rms that were close to Suharto suffered negative returns when bad news about the
Presidents health hit the stock market. Based on this result, we compute for each rm a
cumulative stock return over the six health-related news events identied by Fisman. The
event days are January 30February 1, 1995; April 27, 1995; April 29, 1996; July 49, 1996;
July 26, 1996; and April 13, 1997.3 The cumulative return is on average 4.6% and
exhibits considerable cross-sectional variation. Some rms lost more than 20% of their
value over these six events. We multiply the cumulative returns by 1 so that larger
realizations indicate greater closeness to Suharto. This variable is our main proxy for
political connections.
Table 1 reports descriptive statistics for our sample rms. All nancial statement data
are measured as of the scal year-end in 1996. As expected, rms with publicly traded
foreign securities are signicantly larger than those without such securities. They are also
more capital intensive and have more long-term debt. Both groups exhibit similar
accounting returns on assets for scal 1996.

4. The choice of foreign securities

4.1. Main results

We begin our analysis by studying rms decisions to have publicly traded foreign
securities. In our empirical model, the net benet of foreign securities yi depends on a
vector of rm characteristics, Xi, the closeness to the Suharto regime, Ci, and industry xed
effects, ms :

yi X i b gC i ms ei . (1)

If rms with closer connections to Suharto are less likely to have foreign securities, we
observe go0. Prior studies identify rm size and the export level of a rms industry as
3
For further details on the events see Fisman (2001). There are seven rms for which we do not have return data
for all six events. Dropping these rms does not materially alter our results or inferences. The results are also very
similar using the average rather than the cumulative return over the six events.
ARTICLE IN PRESS
418 C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439

Table 1
Summary statistics for the variables in the analysis
The table reports means and standard deviations (in parentheses) for a sample of 130 Indonesian rms and a
subsample of 22 rms with publicly traded foreign equity securities as of June 1997 and foreign debt securities that
mature in or after 1996. Closeness to Suharto is the log stock return over six news events indicating that
President Suharto is in bad health, multiplied by 1. Closeness to Suharto (resignation) is the log stock return
prior to and at Suhartos resignation (5/12/19985/21/1998), multiplied by 1. Suharto family-owned or SOE is
a binary variable that is equal to one if Suharto, his wife, or any of their children were important owners, or if the
rm is state-owned. The variable is also coded as one if another company in our dataset, which was itself owned
by the Suharto family, is listed as an important owner. Information on the seven most important owners comes
from the Indonesian Capital Market Directory and from Worldscope. Firm characteristics are measured at the
end of scal year 1996. ROA is the ratio of operating income to total assets. Capital intensity is the ratio of
xed assets to total assets. Financial leverage is the ratio of long-term debt to total assets. Age is the number
of years since the rms incorporation. External nancing needs is the rms actual asset growth rate minus the
maximum growth rate that can be nanced if a rm relies only on its internal resources and maintains its dividend,
as suggested by Demirguc-Kunt and Maksimovic (2002). President Director indicates whether the head (CEO)
of the managing board of directors is Chinese ( 1). Volatility is the standard deviation of the weekly stock
returns during 1996. Pre-crisis returns and Crisis returns are annualized log stock returns for the periods
indicated in the table. Days with bad news from Hong Kong (Singapore) is the cumulative returns on the worst
ve trading days for the Hang Seng Index (Strait Times Index) between January 1995 and April 1997. Days with
large exchange rate uctuations is the sum of the absolute returns over the three days with the most positive and
the three days with the most negative changes in the rupiahdollar exchange rate. Days with large positive
exchange rate uctuations is the cumulative returns over the ve days with the most positive changes in the
rupiahdollar exchange rate. We denote statistically signicant differences between the two subgroups as follows:
y
signicant at 10%, *signicant at 5%, **signicant at 1% (using a nonparametric Wilcoxon test).

Full sample (N 130) Firms with foreign Firms w/o foreign securities
securities (N 22) (N 108)

Closeness to Suharto 0.072 0.058 0.075


(0.107) (0.040) 0.116)
Closeness to Suharto 0.109 0.009 0.129
(resignation) (0.208) (0.125) (0.216)**
Suharto family owned 0.092 0.182 0.074
or SOE (0.291) (0.395) (0.263)
Total assets 2390 6430 1570
(millions of Rupiah) (4990) (8730) (3320)**
ROA 0.068 0.070 0.068
(0.069) (0.055) (0.072)
Capital intensity 0.340 0.422 0.324
(0.237) (0.244) (0.233)y
Financial leverage 0.190 0.292 0.169
(0.168) (0.145) (0.165)**
External nancing needs 0.224 0.368 0.193
(0.425) (0.493) (0.405)
Age 24.346 26.182 23.972
(13.806) (14.090) (13.784)
President Director is 0.585 0.591 0.583
Chinese (0.495) (0.503) (0.495)
Volatility 0.062 0.060 0.062
(0.026) (0.036) (0.024)
Pre-crisis log returns 0.267 0.135 0.294
7/1/966/30/97 (0.420) (0.346) (0.430)
Crisis log returns 1.353 1.077 1.410
7/1/978/31/98 (1.153) (0.849) (1.200)
ARTICLE IN PRESS
C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439 419

Table 1 (continued )

Full sample (N 130) Firms with foreign Firms w/o foreign securities
securities (N 22) (N 108)

Cumulative returns on days


With bad news from 0.034 0.046 0.031
Hong Kong (0.124) (0.057) (0.134)
With bad news from 0.063 0.086 0.059
Singapore (0.100) (0.083) (0.103)y
With large exchange 0.138 0.172 0.131
rate uctuations (0.112) (0.125) (0.109)
With large positive 0.011 0.002 0.013
exchange rate (0.075) (0.066) (0.076)
uctuations

Industry classification
Agriculture 0.038 0.045 0.037
(0.193) (0.213) (0.190)
Mining 0.015 0 0.019
(0.124) (0.135)
Manufacturing 0.508 0.545 0.500
(0.502) (0.510) (0.502)
Transport 0.062 0.091 0.056
(0.241) (0.294) (0.230)
Trade 0.092 0.091 0.093
(0.291) (0.294) (0.291)
Finance 0.238 0.227 0.241
(0.428) (0.429) (0.430)
Services 0.046 0 0.056
(0.211) (0.230)

important factors inuencing the decision to cross-list shares abroad (Saudagaran, 1988;
Saudagaran and Biddle, 1995; Karolyi, 1998). A basic specication therefore controls for
industry effects and rm size, measured by total assets (model 1).4 Firms nancing needs
and protability can also inuence their inclination to tap into global capital markets. We
add to the base model capital intensity and return on assets as proxies for nancing needs
and protability, respectively (model 2). The former is computed as the ratio of xed assets
to total assets, and the latter is measured as the ratio of operating income to total assets.
Another control variable, which is frequently used in the literature, is nancial leverage
(Healy and Palepu, 2001; Johnson and Mitton, 2003). We compute leverage as the ratio of
long-term debt to total assets (model 3).
The net benet of foreign securities yi is unobserved, but we know which rms have such
securities:
(
1 if yi 40;
yi (2)
0 if yi p0:

4
Using the market value of equity as a proxy for rm size yields even stronger results, but we use total assets
because market capitalization is likely affected by rms nancing and capital structure choices.
ARTICLE IN PRESS
420 C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439

Given the binary nature of our dependent variable, we present probit estimates in
Table 2. Standard errors in parentheses are clustered on business group afliation to
account for the possibility that within-group nancing strategies might be correlated
(Khanna and Palepu, 2000; we use afliation data from Claessens et al., 2000; Fisman,
2001). The models explain a substantial fraction of the cross-sectional variation in rms
foreign nancing choices. The key result is that rms with strong political connections are
less likely to have foreign securities. The estimated coefcient in the rst specication of
Table 2 implies that increasing closeness to Suharto by one standard deviation reduces the
likelihood of a rm having foreign securities by about ve percentage points.
The result that political connections and foreign securities are negatively associated
continues to hold in the extended models 2 and 3 where we control for rm protability
(ROA), nancing needs (capital intensity), and nancial leverage. The results remain
similar if we use other proxies for nancing needs and protability, namely average sales
growth and EBITDA over total assets (not tabulated). We also control for a rms average
trading volume over the event days to address the concern that infrequent trading of some
stocks could affect our results by biasing the Suharto measure towards zero; but including
trading volume leaves our results virtually unchanged. Eleven rms in our sample are
subsidiaries and afliates of foreign rms. Because the tradeoff between domestic political
benets and foreign nancing could be different for these rms, we drop them to test the
robustness of our results (model 4). As before, we nd that rms with better political
connections are less likely to have foreign securities.
A valid measure of political connections is critical for this study. To see if our
results hinge on a particular denition of political connections, we examine two alter-
native proxies for the closeness to Suharto. The rst is rms stock returns during
the days leading up to Suhartos resignation in 1998. The idea is that corporations close to
Suharto were likely to have experienced negative returns when he resigned. It is not clear
at which point the stock market expected Suharto to step down.5 To compute resignation
returns, we chose to accumulate returns over the period from May 12 through May 21,
1998. We use this cumulative return, multiplied by 1, along with all our controls in
model 5. We continue to nd that more closely connected rms are less likely to have
foreign securities.
We also code a direct, family based measure for close connections. We use information
on the identity of the seven most important owners of the rms in our data set to create a
binary variable that is one if Suharto, his wife, or any of their children were important
owners. The variable is also coded as one if another company in our data set, which was
itself owned by the Suharto family, is listed as an important owner. In addition, we include
state-owned enterprises because they were directly controlled by the president. As
expected, companies that were owned by members of the Suharto family are less likely to
have foreign securities (model 6 in Table 2). That said, there is good reason to believe that
the family parameter is biased downward. The Suharto family maintained a complex web
of connections and hid many of its assets. This is one of the reasons why subsequent
Indonesian governments found it difcult to prove charges of cronyism and corruption
(Center for Public Integrity, 2005). However, in the specication with the family indicator,

5
On May 12, student protests calling for Suhartos resignation gained momentum and widespread support. On
May 15, a wing of the ruling Golkar party called for his resignation. The upper house of the Parliament joined
these calls on May 18 (Cohen, 1998; DJ Newswire, 5/18/1998). Suharto nally resigned on May 21.
ARTICLE IN PRESS
C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439 421

Table 2
Foreign securities and political connections
The table reports probit estimates of the likelihood that the 130 Indonesian rms in our sample have publicly
traded foreign securities. The dependent variable takes on a value of one if the rm has foreign securities and zero
otherwise. Closeness to Suharto is the log stock return over six news events indicating that President Suharto is
in bad health, multiplied by 1. Closeness to Suharto (resignation) is the stock return prior to and including
Suhartos resignation (5/12/19985/21/1998), multiplied by 1. Suharto family owned or state-owned enterprise
is a binary indicator, which is 1 if Suharto, his wife, any of their children, or another company that itself is owned
by the Suharto family is one of the rms largest owners. The indicator is also 1 if the company is a state-owned
enterprise. Firm characteristics are measured at the end of scal year 1996. Firm size is the log of total assets in
millions of rupiah. ROA is the ratio of operating income to total assets. Capital intensity is the ratio of xed
assets to total assets. Financial leverage is the ratio of long-term debt to total assets. Industry indicators are
included for agriculture, manufacturing, transport, trade, and nance. Standard errors (in parentheses) are
clustered based on group afliations reported by Fisman (2001) and Claessens et al. (2000). Models 4, 5, and 6
drop rms that are afliates or subsidiaries of foreign rms. We denote (two-sided) levels of statistical signicance
as follows: y signicant at 10%, * signicant at 5%, ** signicant at 1%.
At the bottom of the table, we report two types of tests: an F-test for the hypothesis that the coefcient on the
rst-stage instrument is zero (H0: b^ 1 (Instrument) 0), and a Smith and Blundell (1986) test with the null
hypothesis that our closeness measures are exogenous.

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6)

Closeness to Suharto 4.018 4.021 4.618 5.042


(1.654)* (1.640)* (1.752)** (1.742)**
Closeness to Suharto 1.920
(resignation returns) (0.938)*
Suharto-family owned or 0.940
State-owned enterprise (0.477)*
Firm size 0.852 0.837 0.806 0.793 0.635 0.829
(0.163)** (0.177)** (0.189)** (0.190)** (0.154)** (0.173)**
ROA 0.615 1.287 2.648 0.411 3.416
(2.750) (3.077) (3.793) (3.785) (3.991)
Capital intensity 0.959 0.435 0.640 1.034 0.691
(1.031) (0.925) (0.923) (0.915) (0.948)
Financial leverage 1.777 1.364 0.992 1.160
(0.941)y (0.911) (0.923) (0.934)
Industry indicators Included Included Included Included Included Included
Constant 18.986 19.063 18.749 18.250 15.060 19.241
(3.425)** (3.821)** (4.152)** (4.146)** (3.471)** (3.807)**
Observations 130 130 130 119 119 119
Pseudo R2 0.38 0.39 0.41 0.41 0.40 0.38

H0: b^ 1 (age) 0 0.009 0.003 0.015 0.120 0.095 N/A


(Prob4F) (SmithBlundell test (0.500) (0.643) (0.868) (0.862) (0.965)
(Prob4w2))
H0: b^ 1 (Chinese) 0 0.037 0.048 0.018 0.011 0.107 N/A
(Prob4F) (SmithBlundell test (0.455) (0.415) (0.502) (0.706) (0.518)
(Prob4w2))
H0: b^ 1 (Chinese+age) 0 0.015 0.021 0.010 0.010 0.125 N/A
(SmithBlundell test (0.927) (0.848) (0.691) (0.688) (0.640)
(Prob4w2))
ARTICLE IN PRESS
422 C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439

we effectively assume that companies not owned by a member of the Suharto family are
not connected. This approach erroneously classies non-family connections as non-
connections, thereby reducing differences between connected and unconnected rms and
biasing the estimated coefcient downward. This issue is less likely to arise with our return-
based proxy for political connections.

4.2. Are the results driven by susceptibility to bad news or differences in foreign exposure?

One concern with our results is that the return-based closeness measure could pick up
unobserved cross-sectional variation that is unrelated to rms political connections. One
possibility is that closeness captures how strongly a rm reacts to negative market news,
irrespective of whether these news items concern President Suharto or other economic
events. Another issue might be that health-based returns reect rms differential exposure
to domestic and foreign product markets. Days on which health problems of Indonesias
leader are reported could simply be bad days for the Indonesian economy as a whole,
which have a disproportionately larger negative effect on rms with a strong domestic
orientation. We address these concerns by controlling for a rms susceptibility to bad
news and its exposure to foreign markets.
First, we compute the standard deviation of weekly returns in 1996 and add this measure
of historical volatility to the probit model. Firms with more volatile stocks are likely to
react more strongly to any news event. Table 3 reports this model in the rst column. The
coefcient on volatility is positive but not signicant (p-value 0.168). More importantly,
closeness to Suharto continues to be highly signicant and negatively associated with
foreign securities.
Second, we compute cumulative returns over alternative event days with extreme
negative market news. To obtain events that are unrelated to the Suharto regime, we
identify the worst ve non-adjacent trading days for the Hang Seng Index (Hong Kong) as
well as for the Strait Times Index (Singapore) between January 1995 and April 1997.6 This
is the same time period over which the health events occurred. We construct three
alternative proxies that capture how strongly a rms stock reacts to bad news. For each
sample rm, we compute its cumulative return over (a) the Hong Kong events, (b) the
Singapore events, and (c) the days that register as the worst days in both Hong Kong and
Singapore. The latter days appear to be Asia-wide bad news. The average cumulative
returns for our sample rms are 3.8%, 7.4%, and 8.0%, respectively.
Table 3 reports probit models controlling for the returns during the Hong Kong and
Singapore events (Columns 2 and 3).7 The results using returns on the combined event
days are similar and not reported for brevity. In all cases, we nd that the coefcient on
political closeness slightly increases in magnitude and signicance. Thus, these tests
provide no evidence that differences in rms responsiveness to negative news in general
drive our main result.

6
Adjacent trading days are combined into one event. We make sure that the event windows do not overlap with
the Suharto health events. We also examine news reports for these days. The negative returns on these days
primarily reect worldwide equity market movements or interest rate or dollar exchange rate changes.
7
There are two rms for which we cannot compute returns for the Singapore events because the worst days in
Singapore were in 1995 and early 1996 before these two rms started trading on the Jakarta exchange.
ARTICLE IN PRESS
C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439 423

Table 3
Foreign securities and political connectionsrobustness tests
The table reports probit estimates of the likelihood that the 130 Indonesian rms in our sample have publicly
traded foreign securities. The dependent variable takes on a value of one if the rm has foreign securities and zero
otherwise. Volatility is computed as the standard deviation of weekly returns in 1996. The susceptibility to bad
news is based on returns measured on extreme days with negative market news that are unrelated to the Suharto
regime. For each sample rm, we compute the cumulative return on the worst ve non-adjacent trading days for
the Hang Seng Index (Hong Kong) and, separately, for the Strait Times Index (Singapore) between January 1995
and April 1997. Column 2 (3) reports the results using returns on the Hong Kong (Singapore) events. Exposure
is based on currency shocks, i.e., changes in the rupiahdollar exchange rate of more than one percent. In Column
4, we use the sum of the absolute returns over the three worst and three best days of the exchange rate. In Column
5, we compute cumulative returns over the ve worst days, i.e., days when the rupiah fell against the dollar.
External nancing needs is the rms actual asset growth rate minus the maximum growth rate that can be
nanced if a rm relies only on its internal resources and maintains its dividend, as suggested by Demirguc-Kunt
and Maksimovic (2002).
The other control variables are as dened before (see Table 2 for details). We denote (two-sided) levels of
statistical signicance as follows: y signicant at 10%, * signicant at 5%, ** signicant at 1%.

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6)

(Volatility) (HK (SG returns) (D Rupiah) (D (Ext. Fin.)


returns) Rupiah)

Closeness to Suharto 4.371 4.866 5.186 5.822 5.623 5.424


(1.624)** (1.806)** (1.842)** (1.895)** (2.219)** (1.851)**
Volatility 6.269
(4.751)
Susceptibility to bad news 0.810 2.756
(1.541) (1.839)
Exposure 3.390 6.114
(1.751)* (2.490)*
External nancing needs 0.809
(0.341)*
Firm size 0.826 0.801 0.777 0.882 0.957 0.802
(0.183)** (0.189)** (0.191)** (0.202)** (0.212)** (0.196)**
ROA 1.623 1.351 1.723 1.940 2.016 2.559
(2.980) (2.992) (2.990) (3.102) (3.214) (3.372)
Capital intensity 0.376 0.466 0.543 0.011 0.165 0.433
(0.915) (0.932) (0.963) (0.929) (0.970) (0.979)
Financial leverage 1.692 1.747 1.892 1.557 2.066 2.017
(0.919)y (0.951)y (1.023)y (0.946)y (1.004)* (0.989)*
Industry Included Included Included Included Included Included
Constant 19.474 18.664 18.332 20.724 21.797 19.040
(4.031)** (4.136) (4.182)** (4.393)** (4.575)** (4.324)**
Observations 130 130 128 130 130 126
Pseudo R2 0.41 0.41 0.41 0.44 0.45 0.43

Next, we control for differences in rms exposure to foreign markets and the
Indonesian economy. We compute stock returns on days with currency shocks, i.e.,
extreme changes in the rupiahdollar exchange rate. Returns on these days are
likely to reect cross-sectional differences in the degree to which rms are exposed to
foreign and domestic product markets. We accumulate returns in two ways. First, to
ARTICLE IN PRESS
424 C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439

capture positive and negative rate uctuations, we sum the absolute returns on the
three worst and three best days of the rupiahdollar exchange rate in the time
period during which the health events occurred. Second, we compute cumulative
returns over the ve days during which the rupiah weakened most signicantly against
the dollar. On all these days, the rupiahdollar exchange rate changed by more than
one percent.
Table 3 reports probit estimates using both exposure measures as additional controls
(Columns 4 and 5). In both cases, the coefcient on exposure is signicant and positive.
That is, rms that are more affected by changes in the rupiahdollar exchange rate are
more likely to have foreign securities. The positive coefcient on returns for days on
which the rupiah fell against the dollar suggests that rms with foreign securities
generally benet from a weak rupiah, perhaps because they are more export-oriented
and more engaged in foreign markets. This nding is interesting in light of the recent
debate about the performance effects of debt denominated in foreign currency. The
macroeconomic literature on nancial crises distinguishes two effects of currency
devaluations: a drop in net worth, which weakens rms balance sheet positions, and
a competitiveness effect which improves nancial performance (Krugman, 1999; Aghion
et al., 2001). As in Bleakley and Cowan (2002), our results seem to imply that the
competitiveness effect dominates the net worth effect. In models 4 and 5 (Table 3),
controlling for the exposure to foreign markets slightly increases the negative relation
between closeness to Suharto and the likelihood of having foreign securities. We also check
that controlling simultaneously for historical volatility, susceptibility to bad news, and
exposure produces similar results to those reported in Table 3. But even then, the closeness
measure remains highly signicant.
A nal concern is that rms with foreign securities are nancially less dependent on
Suharto and hence less likely to experience negative returns on days with bad news
about Suhartos health. This logic suggests that the negative association between our
return-based closeness measure and foreign nancing might reect nancial dependence
on Suharto. Our models control for leverage, capital intensity, and industry, all of
which are likely to be associated with rms external nancing needs, thus alleviating the
concern to some extent. To directly address this issue, we compute a proxy for a rms
dependence on external capital suggested by Demirguc-Kunt and Maksimovic (2002).
If connected rms with higher external nancing needs are more nancially dependent on
Suharto, introducing a proxy for these needs will attenuate the measured effect of
closeness. As expected, we nd that rms with larger external nancing needs are
more likely to have foreign securities (Table 3, model 6). However, the coefcient on
closeness remains negatively associated with foreign securities and even increases
relative to Table 2. In addition, our family-based connection measure, which is not
subject to this nal concern, produces similar results. Thus, our result that political
connections and foreign nancing are substitutes does not seem to be driven by nancial
dependence on Suharto.

4.3. Is closeness to Suharto endogenously determined?

While a rms exposure to foreign markets and its susceptibility to bad news do not
explain the relation between political connections and global nancing, there is, more
generally, a concern that the closeness measure could be endogenously determined. The
ARTICLE IN PRESS
C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439 425

models in Table 2 assume that rms political connections are predetermined. This
assumption is not unreasonable because many important political connections in
Indonesia appear to be family related (see model 6 in Table 2 and Backman, 2001).
Similarly, for Malaysia, another country with a centralized political power structure,
Johnson and Mitton (2003) argue that political connections are based on chance and have
long personal histories. Nevertheless, we develop an instrumental-variable strategy to
address the endogeneity concern.
Smith and Blundell (1986) suggest a simple exogeneity test for models with limited
dependent variables. The test involves the estimation of a rst stage with closeness as the
dependent variable. The residuals from the rst stage are then included as an additional
covariate in the models in Table 2. Under the null hypothesis of exogeneity, the rst-stage
residuals have no explanatory power at the second stage. The standard order condition
for identication applies, so we need at least one instrument for a rms closeness to
the regime.
We focus on two instruments that have the advantage of not being choice variables. The
rst instrument is the rms age. Controlling for closeness, age has no independent effect
on the rms likelihood of having foreign securities, but younger rms are more likely to
have close political connections, possibly because they are in greater need of political
help early in their lives when they establish themselves in the fairly concentrated
Indonesian business environment.8 Our second instrument is the ethnicity of a rms
president director.9 Given the delicate state of race relations in Indonesia, it is likely that
Chinese managers viewed close political connections with former President Suharto in a
different light than indigenous Indonesians (Pribumis). In Indonesia, political favors of
questionable legality typically needed to be repaid by kickbacks and side payments of an
equally dubious nature. This practice was risky for any manager, but particularly perilous
for Chinese executives because their ethnicity could be used against them. The trial of
Golden Key owner Tan Tjoe Hong provides an example. Accused of having fraudulently
secured a $430 million letter of credit, Hong was subject to a vocal anti-Chinese campaign
throughout his trial. The Far Eastern Economic Review reports that Indonesians holding
anti-Chinese views were paid to attend the court hearings (McBeth, 1994). Perhaps due to
such fears and pressures, Chinese managers in our dataset are on average not as close to
the Suharto regime as Pribumis.
To be valid instruments, rm age and the ethnicity of the president director must
be correlated with political closeness but uncorrelated with the choice of foreign
securities. Consistent with this requirement, we do not nd evidence that rm age
or the ethnicity of the president director inuence rms choices of foreign securities
other than through the channel of political connections. Whether included separately or
jointly in the models of Table 2, the coefcients on the instruments remain economically

8
We thank Benny Tabalujan for suggesting this instrument and providing anecdotal evidence.
9
Indonesian rms have a two-tiered board structure. The president director heads the managing board of
directors. Hence, the role of the president director broadly corresponds to the role of the CEO. Information on the
ethnicity of the president director and the dominant owner, which we use as an alternative instrument, comes from
a large number of publicly available sources such as press reports and company websites. We crosschecked
information with an Indonesian accounting rm, an Indonesian stockbroker, and Indonesian students at the
Wharton School. Michael Backman also kindly shared his expertise in these matters. A complete list of all sources
is available upon request.
ARTICLE IN PRESS
426 C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439

small and statistically insignicant, whereas the closeness variable remains largely
unchanged.10
At the rst stage, rm age and the president directors ethnicity are signicant predictors
of our closeness measure (see F-tests for the null that the coefcients on the instruments are
zero, reported at the bottom of Table 2.) Our instruments are weaker when we use
resignation returns as the measure for political connections. Table 2 also reports p-values
for the SmithBlundell exogeneity test. As shown, we cannot reject exogeneity using either
rm age, the ethnicity of the president director, or both instruments. In all cases, the
p-values are far from conventional signicance levels. Assuming that either rm age or the
president directors ethnicity are valid instruments, we nd no evidence that our closeness
measure is endogenous to the choice of foreign securities.
Overall, the results presented in Tables 2 and 3 lend reasonable support to our
hypothesis that domestic opportunities inuence rms foreign nancing choices. All three
measures of political connectionsstock returns during Suhartos health crises, stock
returns during Suhartos resignation, and a direct family-based measureindicate that
rms with good political connections are less likely to have publicly traded foreign
securities.

5. Public and private foreign securities

In this section, we investigate whether our results are specic to the type of foreign
securities we have analyzed so far. We explore this question in two ways. First, we apply a
narrower denition of foreign security using only a subset of issues that are publicly traded
on major U.S. exchanges. These securities require a 20-F ling with the SEC and hence
come with more stringent disclosure requirements. Second, we analyze foreign securities
that are private debt agreements or private equity placements. These arrangements allow
investors to be informed via private channels rather than public disclosure. Contrasting the
results for private and public foreign securities can shed some light on the role that
informational considerations play in rms foreign nancing decisions.
We identify eight rms with U.S. debt or equity securities that require a 20-F ling with
the SEC. Table 4 reports the probit estimates using the full set of controls (Column 1).
Firms that are closer to Suharto are signicantly less likely to have U.S. securities that
require a 20-F ling. The result is essentially the same as the one for our broader
classication. To determine whether the earlier estimates for the more inclusive
classication are solely driven by securities that are publicly traded in the U.S., we re-
estimate the model in Table 2 excluding 20-F rms (Column 2).11 Closeness to Suharto is
still a signicant predictor of global nancing choices. We also check whether the
distinction between debt and equity securities is relevant to our analysis. We re-estimate
our models using either foreign debt or foreign equity securities only. In these analyses,
closeness to Suharto is negatively associated with both types of foreign securities. For this
reason, we do not think that our ndings have capital structure implications.12
10
When included in specication (3) of Table 2, the coefcient on age is 0.002 with a standard error of 0.013.
The coefcient on ethnicity is 0.285 with a standard error 0.490.
11
Eliminating 20-F rms still leaves one rm in the sample that trades in the U.S. but does not le with the SEC.
Dropping this rm does not alter the results reported in Column 2 of Table 4.
12
Our analysis focuses on the question where rms obtain nance and not whether it is debt or equity. Capital
structure theories should therefore apply in the usual way.
ARTICLE IN PRESS
C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439 427

Table 4
U.S. securities with 20-F ling, private foreign securities, and political connections
The table reports probit estimates of the likelihood that the 130 Indonesian rms in our sample have a certain
type of foreign security. In the rst column, the dependent variable takes on a value of one if the rm has securities
that are publicly traded in the U.S. and require a 20-F ling with the SEC, and 0 otherwise. In model (2), rms
with publicly traded foreign securities that do not require a 20-F ling are analyzed. In Column 3, the binary
dependent variable indicates with a value of one that the rm has private securities (e.g., loans or private equity
placements) that were arranged by at least one foreign investment bank as a lead manager. In Column 4, the
dependent variable is based on information about the securitys (target) marketplace indicated in the SDC
database. If the security is privately placed outside of Asia or specically classied as a foreign private
placement, we set the binary variable equal to one. In the fth column, the dependent variable takes on a value of
one if the rm has private placements in the U.S. All private securities are classied based on information in the
SDC database.
All other variables are as dened before (see Table 2 for details). We denote (two-sided) levels of statistical
signicance as follows: y signicant at 10% * signicant at 5% ** signicant at 1%.

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5)

Public U.S. Foreign Private Private Private U.S.


securities (20-F securities w/o securities securities securities
ling) 20-F (Foreign (Foreign (144a
bank) market) placement)

Closeness to Suharto 6.791 3.713 0.259 0.578 1.341


(2.734)* (1.797)* (1.345) (1.779) (1.213)
Firm size 0.590 0.699 0.442 0.691 0.336
(0.168)** (0.197)** (0.104)** (0.110)** (0.097)**
ROA 2.070 1.356 0.327 0.785 2.765
(4.203) (3.216) (1.900) (3.101) (2.957)
Capital intensity 3.251 0.092 0.855 0.212 0.147
(1.036)** (1.047) (0.661) (0.595) (0.526)
Financial leverage 2.439 1.581 1.610 0.125 1.047
(1.393)y (0.933)y (0.856)y (0.954) (0.837)
Industry Included Included Included Included Included
Constant 16.213 16.448 8.726 15.524 9.340
(4.128)** (4.275)** (2.179)** (2.279)** (2.000)**

Observations 130 122 130 130 130


Pseudo R2 0.47 0.33 0.23 0.34 0.15

Next, we analyze if rms that were close to the Suharto regime are also less likely to have
private foreign securities such as loans from foreign banks and private placements in the
U.S. under Rule 144a. We obtain data from the SDC database on private securities such as
term loans, revolving credit facilities, syndicated loans, and private equity placements. As
private securities are not traded, it is more difcult to determine what precisely constitutes
a foreign security. We create three variables. The rst indicates that at least one of the lead
managers arranging the private security is a foreign investment bank. We identify 64
private securities of this type. The second variable is based on the market place indicated
in SDC, i.e., the region that a private placement targets (e.g., Asia, Europe, or the U.S.).
Our indicator equals one if the rms securities are privately placed outside Asia or if the
placement is specically classied as foreign. We identify 23 securities of this type.
Finally, the third variable is even more specic indicating private placements in the U.S.
There are eight such securities.
ARTICLE IN PRESS
428 C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439

Table 4 reports probit estimates for the three denitions of private securities. All
specications include the full set of controls (Columns 35). While the standard errors are
similar in magnitude to the errors in our previous analyses, the coefcients on the private
securities indicators are insignicant in all cases. Firms that were close to Suharto are as
likely as rms without political ties to have private foreign securities. The contrast between
the ndings for the U.S. securities requiring 20-F lings (Column 1) and U.S. private
placements (Column 5) is particularly interesting because the comparison holds the foreign
target market constant. To conrm that the coefcients on closeness are in fact statistically
different across the models for public and private foreign securities, we estimated a series
of bivariate probit models (not tabulated). Relative to their probability of having publicly
traded securities, politically connected rms are signicantly more likely to have private
securities. The differences documented in Table 4 are not the result of weak statistical
power.
The results in this section indicate that it matters whether a foreign security is publicly
traded or privately issued, suggesting that transparency considerations do play some role
in the documented tradeoff between political connections and foreign nancing. While the
evidence in Table 4 points to one possible interpretation of our ndings, we acknowledge
that the evidence is merely suggestive. The mechanism question is not central to this paper,
and we leave it to future work to determine why closely connected rms are reluctant to
issue publicly traded foreign securities.

6. Returns to foreign securities before and during the Asian nancial crisis

Another approach to testing our hypothesis that political relationships and foreign
securities are alternative means of increasing rm value is to explicitly study the
performance consequences of the two strategies. This analysis also demonstrates how
important it is for empirical studies to account for the endogeneity of listing decisions.
We analyze the stock returns of our sample rms one year prior to and during the
nancial crisis of 1997 and 1998. In a nancial market equilibrium, it would be surprising if
rms with foreign securities consistently outperformed rms with strong political
relationships. In contrast, unexpected shocks such as the nancial crisis in Asia are more
likely to result in signicant differences in performance. The Asian crisis, which many
believe was due in part to weak corporate governance and low levels of transparency
(Stiglitz, 1998; Harvey and Roper, 1999), might have created a premium for more
transparent rms. Johnson et al. (2000), Mitton (2002), Lemmon and Lins (2003), and
Baek et al. (2004) provide evidence to this effect.
However, as the results in the previous section suggest, global nancing and corporate
transparency are only half the story. In measuring the performance effects of foreign
securities, it is important to take into account rms political connections and consider
how the regime responded to the economic turmoil. If President Suharto lost some of his
ability to support politically well-connected rms during the crisis, return regressions that
ignore political connections overestimate the value of foreign listings. In contrast, if
Suharto supported his rms during the crisis, the benets of foreign securities during the
crisis might be larger than previously estimated. There is ample evidence that Suharto was
personally involved in propping up connected companies during the 19971998 turmoil.
For instance, Texmaco, a large Indonesian conglomerate with excellent connections,
received loans in excess of $1 billion from Bank Negara Indonesia (BNI) during the crisis.
ARTICLE IN PRESS
C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439 429

Suharto personally authorized these loans that violated Indonesian lending caps (Tesoro,
1999; see also Solomon, 1999).13
To investigate the importance of having foreign securities, we estimate a series of models
explaining the stock price performance of our sample rms prior to and during the Asian
nancial crisis. In particular, we compare models that treat the presence of foreign
securities as exogenous with models that explicitly take into account that foreign securities
are chosen with a view to prior political investments. We investigate the year prior to the
crisis (7/1/966/30/97) and the crisis period itself (6/30/978/31/98). The latter study period
is chosen to make our results directly comparable to the analysis in Mitton (2002). We use
annualized log returns ri as our dependent variable so that we can compare the magnitude
of the estimated coefcients across time periods. We control for rm size (measured as the
log of total assets), nancial leverage (ratio of long-term debt to total assets), and the
historical volatility of the stock (standard deviation of weekly returns in 1996):

ri X i b fyi ms ei . (3)

The results in Mitton suggest that rms with foreign securities outperform other rms
during the crisis, i.e., f40: The performance effects of foreign nancing are reported in
Table 5. In a simple OLS regression, we nd a positive and signicant effect during the
crisis (Column 4), consistent with Mitton. In contrast, rms with foreign securities do not
outperform other rms in the year prior to the crisis (Column 1), which is in line with our
expectations for returns in a nancial market equilibrium. To the extent that these
estimates are biased, the bias is not the result of an omitted variable problem. Adding our
measure of closeness to these regressions, political connections bear no signicant relation
to stock returns and the coefcient on foreign securities changes little.
Next, we estimate treatment effects models. These models explicitly account for the
substitutive relation between political connections and global nancing, thereby isolating
the marginal effect of foreign securities on performance. The rst stage of these models is
the corresponding probit model from Table 2. At the second stage, we estimate Eq. (3).
For all models, we clearly reject independence of the two stages (see the Wald tests
reported at the bottom of the table). Thus, it is inappropriate to run simple performance
regressions to measure the impact of foreign securities on stock returns.
The rst set of treatment effects results are presented in Columns 2 and 5 of Table 5. The
performance effects of foreign securities are considerably larger than in the simple OLS
regressions. Conceptually, the difference is an estimate of the benets that Suharto
provided to well-connected rms during the crisis. Controlling for political relationships,
we now nd a positive performance effect of foreign securities for the year prior to the
Asian crisis, underscoring that both political connections and foreign securities contribute
to rm value even outside the crisis.
To address the concern that our results simply reect long-run differences in
performance across rms, a second set of treatment effects models controls for rm
protability prior to the crisis (ROA) and rms nancing needs (capital intensity) (see
Columns 3 and 6, Table 5). These controls reduce the magnitude of the estimated
performance effects only minimally.

13
Connected families can also prop up their ailing conglomerate using private funds, but such behavior while
interesting is a separate issue (see Tabalujan, 2002; Friedman et al., 2003; Cheung et al., 2004).
ARTICLE IN PRESS
430 C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439

Table 5
Returns to foreign securities
The table reports regression results with annualized log returns for 130 Indonesian rms as the dependent
variable. Foreign Securities is an indicator equal to 1 if a rm has publicly traded foreign securities and 0
otherwise. Firm characteristics are measured at the end of scal year 1996. Firm size is computed as the log of
total assets. Financial leverage is the ratio of long-term debt to total assets. Volatility is the standard
deviation of the weekly stock returns during 1996. ROA is the ratio of operating income to total assets.
Capital intensity is the ratio of xed assets to total assets. Industry indicators are included for agriculture,
mining, manufacturing, transport, trade, nance, and services. Standard errors (in parentheses) are clustered
based on group afliations reported by Fisman (2001) and Claessens et al. (2000).
In the two-stage treatment effects models, the rst stage is a probit model (Models 2 and 3 in Table 2,
respectively). We report the result of a Wald test for the null hypothesis that the rst-stage and the second-stage
equations are independent (r 0). At the bottom of the table, we test whether the effect of foreign securities on
returns is different before and during the crisis (fpre-crisis fcrisis) using pooled models. The standard errors for
the pooled models are bootstrapped using 1,000 replications. The coefcient on the interaction in Column 4
compares the estimated performance effects of foreign securities in Row 1 of Columns 1 and 4 (and analogously
for Columns 5 and 6).
We denote (two-sided) levels of statistical signicance as follows: y signicant at 10%, * signicant at 5%, **
signicant at 1%.

7/1/966/30/97 Pre-crisis 7/1/978/31/98 Mitton (2002)

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6)

OLS 2-stage 2-stage OLS 2-stage 2-stage


estimates estimates estimates estimates

Foreign securities 0.029 0.452 0.440 0.682 2.350 2.211


(0.100) (0.202)* (0.205)* (0.271)* (0.470)** (0.203)**
Firm size 0.034 0.104 0.094 0.079 0.342 0.290
(0.028) (0.037)** (0.037)** (0.104) (0.122)** (0.103)**
Financial leverage 0.291 0.271 0.354 1.293 0.697 1.720
(0.284) (0.263) (0.291) (0.659)y (0.808) (0.691)*
Volatility 2.473 1.711 1.607 1.446 0.559 0.943
(1.479)y (1.586) (1.585) (3.430) (2.446) (1.968)
ROA 0.517 2.295
(0.448) (1.410)y
Capital intensity 0.197 0.820
(0.169) (0.501)y
Industry Included Included Included Included Included Included
Constant 0.608 2.095 2.008 2.029 4.382 3.112
(0.593) (0.778)** (0.773)** (2.190) (2.290)y (2.066)

Observations 130 130 130 130 130 130


R-squared 0.21 0.22
H0: r 0 Prob4w2 0.0059 0.0060 0.0085 0.0000

H0: fpre-crisis fcrisis 0.507 0.415 0.420


Foreign Sec.  crisis (0.336) (0.269) (0.279)
Foreign securities 0.119 0.971 0.942
(0.154) (0.420)* (0.427)*
Crisis 1.706 1.691 1.691
(0.135)** (0.114)** (0.118)**
ARTICLE IN PRESS
C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439 431

Finally, it is interesting to know whether the benets of having foreign securities


increased during the Asian nancial crisis. A casual glance at Table 5 suggests that the
performance effects of foreign securities are larger during the crisis. To formally test this
hypothesis, we pool pre-crisis and crisis returns to form a panel. We control for the period
by introducing a time indicator (Crisis) that equals 1 for returns during the crisis. An
interaction term Foreign Securities  Crisis allows the performance effect of foreign
securities to vary by period. While we include all other covariates shown in the upper half
of Table 5, we only report the coefcient estimates for foreign securities, the crisis, and the
interaction term at the bottom of Columns 4, 5, and 6. Bootstrapped standard errors based
on 1,000 replications are given in parentheses. As expected, returns are signicantly lower
during the crisis. Moreover, the coefcients on the interaction term are positive in all three
models. However, they are not statistically signicant at conventional levels. Thus, there is
at best weak evidence that the Asian crisis increased the benets of having publicly traded
foreign securities. As we have panel data, we can also estimate these models using rm
xed effects. The resulting coefcient on the interaction remains virtually unchanged,
indicating that time-invariant unobserved rm characteristics do not bias our estimates.
Overall, the results presented in Table 5 suggest that President Suharto lent considerable
nancial support to politically well-connected rms before and during the nancial crisis.
As a consequence, conventionally measured performance effects of cross-listings or other
forms of foreign nancing are considerably downward biased if political relationships are
ignored.

7. Dynamics of political relationships and foreign nancing

Politically well-connected rms pursue different nancing strategies than less connected
companies, and these strategies help explain some of the variation in performance during
the Asian nancial crisis. In this section, we look beyond the immediate crisis to document
how politically connected rms fare over longer periods of time. We are particularly
interested in the performance of connected rms after their patrons leave ofce. Do
investments in political relationships continue to pay off even when a new government is in
charge? Indonesia provides an ideal context to study this question. After Suharto was
forced to step down on 21 May 1998, B.J. Habibie, a long-time Suharto ally, was
immediately sworn in as Indonesias new president. Habibie had personally beneted from
Suhartos patronage and was widely expected to continue the Suharto policies.14 The
transition from Suharto to Habibie thus affords the opportunity to study the performance
consequences of political relationships when a friendly government succeeds a regime.
In contrast, President Abdurrahman Wahid, who was elected on October 21, 1999, ran
on an anti-establishment platform and was much more critical of the Suharto regime.
14
While small in comparison to the Suharto empire, which Time Magazine estimated to be $73 billion prior to
the nancial crisis and $15 billion in 1998 (Colmey and Liebhold, 1999), the Habibie family controlled interests in
chemicals, construction, real estate, transport, and communications. Many of these businesses had proted from
government contracts and state-granted monopolies (Symonds, 1998). The BBC concluded that President
Habibie owes his rise to power entirely to his close friendship with former President Suharto (Head, 1998).
Suharto met Habibie in the 1950s when he was stationed on the island of Sulawesi. In 1974, Suharto asked
Habibie, who was then working in Germany, to return to Indonesia and placed him in charge of the state-owned
oil company. In 1978, Habibie was appointed Minister of Research and Technology, a post he held until he was
endorsed as vice-president (Symonds, 1998).
ARTICLE IN PRESS
432 C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439

However, even if the opposition takes over, it is not obvious that rms connected to the old
regime will perform worse. First, some of the benets associated with political connections
are not easy to revoke in a legal manner, such as banking and mineral extraction licenses as
well as long-term loans from state-owned banks. Second, companies that decided to invest
in close links with the old regime might also nd it benecial to build close relations with
the new government. Ultimately, it is the nature of political relationships that critically
inuences how connected rms perform when the regime changes. In models of political
economy, political favors are often traded like other resources: politicians with inuence
offer more of their services to rms that offer higher payments (Bernheim and Whinston,
1986; Grossman and Helpman, 1994; Persson, 1998). In these models the same groups will
be inuential independent of the government that is in ofce. However, in richer models of
the policy process, such as in specications with partisan preferences (Alesina, 1988),
politicians are no longer perfect substitutes, interest groups might favor particular
candidates, and these candidates will have incentives to repay their groups when they are
in power (for surveys, see Austen-Smith, 1997; Rodrik, 1995). The price of buying political
favors is then path-dependent: supporting a particular regime in one period inuences the
future cost of favors. The study of the performance consequences of regime changes thus
implicitly tests the plasticity of political relationships. An interesting null is that regime
changes do not matter because rms can invest in new regimes just as easily as they were
able to build connections with the old guard.
To study the performance consequences of regime changes, we collected rm-
level performance data and controls for four periods: Suharto prior to the nancial
crisis (7/1/966/30/97), Suharto during the crisis (7/1/975/21/98), the Habibie period
(5/22/9810/19/99), and the Wahid government (10/21/996/30/01). We estimate models
of the form
rit X it b gC i lC i Rt yRt eit , (4)
where the rit are annualized log returns in period t, Xit is a vector of rm characteristics, Ci
denotes the closeness to the Suharto regime, and Rit is an indicator variable for a particular
Indonesian government. The omitted time period is the Suharto regime before the crisis.
The specication is a difference-in-difference model. The coefcient of interest, l, measures
how the difference in annualized returns that is due to connections changes with changes in
the regime.
A potential concern with estimates from (4) is that politically well-connected rms
differ in unobserved ways from less-connected companies and that these differences
are correlated with nancial performance. We can difference out such time-invariant
heterogeneity by estimating
rit X it b lC i Rt yRt ni eit , (4a)
where ni is a rm xed effect. Note that ni subsumes the main effect of closeness on stock
performance.
The results for model (4) are reported in Table 6. There is clear evidence of path
dependence. Compared to the pre-crisis period, rms with close connections to Suharto
fared worse during the crisis when Suharto was in power and during the Wahid
government. Under Habibie, connected rms performed as well as they did prior to the
crisis. Model 4 of Table 6, where we include all three regimes, conrms that, relative to
the pre-crisis period, the Habibie government was the only period during which
ARTICLE IN PRESS
C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439 433

Table 6
Returns to political connections under different governments
The table reports regression results with annualized log returns for 130 Indonesian rms as the dependent
variable. Closeness to Suharto is the log stock return over six news events indicating that President Suharto is
in bad health, multiplied by 1. There are three indicators for different periods. Suharto Crisis is the period
from 7/1/97 to 5/21/98. Habibie is an indicator for the time period during which President Habibie was in power,
5/22/9810/19/99. Another indicator denotes the government of President Wahid, 10/21/996/30/01. The omitted
period is 7/1/966/30/97, a pre-crisis period during which President Suharto ruled Indonesia. Firm size is
computed as the log of total assets. Financial leverage is the ratio of long-term debt to total assets. Volatility
is the standard deviation of the weekly stock returns. Industry indicators are included for agriculture, mining,
manufacturing, transport, trade, nance, and services. Model (5) includes rm xed effects. Standard errors (in
parentheses) are clustered based on group afliations reported by Fisman (2001) and Claessens et al. (2000). At
the bottom of the table, we report p-values from F-tests of the null hypothesis that the sum of the Closeness to
Suharto variable and its interaction with a particular time indicator is zero. We denote (two-sided) levels of
statistical signicance as follows: y signicant at 10%, * signicant at 5%, ** signicant at 1%.

Pre-crisis vs. Pre-crisis vs. Pre-crisis vs. All periods


Suharto crisis Habibie Wahid

7/1/966/30/97 & 7/1/966/30/97 & 7/1/966/30/97 & 7/1/966/30/2001


7/1/975/21/98 5/22/9810/19/99 10/21/996/30/01 & 7/1/966/30/97
(omitted)

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) Firm-xed


effects

Closeness to Suharto 0.952 0.654 0.956 0.809


(0.530) (0.570) (0.550) (0.578)
Closeness  Suharto 2.278 2.241 2.258
crisis (0.774)** (0.855)** (0.949)*
Closeness  Habibie 0.315 0.248 0.093
(0.766) (0.843) (0.930)
Closeness  Wahid 1.809 2.063 2.226
(0.762)* (0.866)* (0.965)*
Suharto crisis 0.766 0.905 0.921
(0.102)** (0.108)** (0.128)**
Habibie 0.057 0.184 0.080
(0.112) (0.119) (0.152)
Wahid 0.473 0.666 0.716
(0.109)** (0.116)** (0.145)**
Firm size 0.046 0.066 0.117 0.076 0.090
(0.031) (0.028)* (0.028)** (0.022)** (0.116)
Financial 0.330 0.222 0.278 0.081 0.198
leverage (0.265) (0.144) (0.168) (0.128) (0.209)
Volatility 4.169 4.433 1.402 0.834 2.310
(1.477)** (0.782)** (0.902) (0.677) (0.960)*
ROA 1.358 0.513 1.293 0.480 0.268
(0.583)* (0.204)* (0.373)** (0.201)* (0.278)
Capital intensity 0.363 0.316 0.027 0.023 0.030
(0.217) (0.186) (0.181) (0.157) (0.363)
Industry Included Included Included Included
Constant 1.648 0.908 2.320 1.792 1.899
(0.734)* (0.630) (0.653)** (0.524)** (2.364)

Observations 251 233 225 488 488


R-squared 0.50 0.25 0.48 0.43 0.44
p-values for H0: 0.0256 0.5274 0.1170 0.0265
close+close  0.0925
period 0 0.0574
ARTICLE IN PRESS
434 C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439

Suharto-connected rms did as well as before the crisis. Controlling for unobserved time-
invariant rm characteristics as in (4a), we nd the same pattern of results as in our
previous models (model 5).
Were political connections a good long-term investment in Indonesia? The bottom row
of Table 6 reports p-values from F-tests of the null hypothesis that connections had no
inuence on nancial performance (g+l 0). We nd that connected rms under-
performed during the crisis when Suharto was still in power, but they outperformed less
connected rms during the Habibie period. Once Wahid came to ofce, however, it was
not easy for the Suharto cronies to re-establish protable political ties and the performance
of their companies suffered correspondingly. Anecdotal evidence is consistent with the
patterns in the data. For example, Texmacos chairman, Marimutu Sinivasan, who had
received huge loans during the Suharto period, maintained close connections with Habibie.
He was named Special Business Envoy for Asia, became vice treasurer for the ruling party,
and received lucrative orders from the Indonesian army. Wahid, in contrast, ordered an
investigation of Texmacos nances and insisted the case be settled under the due process
of law (Tesoro, 1999).
Having lost their political support, did the Suharto cronies nd it more attractive to
issue foreign securities? Such behavior would be consistent with our results in Table 2. We
begin analyzing this conjecture by counting the rms with foreign securities under Suharto
and under Wahid. In Table 7 (upper panel), we document that there is considerable
variation over time. Of the 21 companies that had publicly traded securities in 1997, ve
gave up their securities, and 12 companies added foreign securities to their nancing
strategy. The middle panel in Table 7 looks at changes in nancing for closely connected
and less-connected rms. A rm is classied as being close to Suharto if its closeness index
exceeds the median value of the sample. Nine closely connected but only three other rms
issued new foreign securities under the Wahid government. This is our rst evidence that
Suharto rms responded to the change in government by adopting a more outward-
oriented nancing strategy.
In the bottom panel of Table 7, we investigate the link between past political connections
and current nancing strategies more formally. The rst specication is a probit model that
is estimated on the sample of rms that did not have foreign securities during the Suharto
period and were still active in 2001 N 101. The dependent variable takes on a value of
one if a company has publicly traded foreign securities in 2001 and zero otherwise.
Controlling for rm-specic characteristics, we nd that rms that were closer to Suharto
have a greater tendency to issue foreign securities under Wahid. A one-standard-deviation
increase in closeness raises the likelihood of having new securities by 2.1 percentage points,
an effect that is statistically signicant at the 6% level.
The second model in Table 7 reports results for all rms that are included in the original
sample and are still active in 2001 N 122. This model uses information on rms that
adopt new securities and information on rms that give up foreign securities during the
Wahid government. The dependent variable is ordered. Adopting new foreign securities
increases exposure to foreign investors and giving up securities has the opposite effect.
Thus, we estimate an ordered probit model. The dependent variable is 1 if the rm no
longer has a foreign security, 0 if there is no change, and 1 if the company issued a new
security. We nd that rms that were close to Suharto are more likely to adopt an
outward-oriented nancing strategy under Wahid. Similar to our previous result, the
estimated coefcient on the closeness variable implies that a one-standard-deviation
ARTICLE IN PRESS
C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439 435

Table 7
New issues of foreign securities after regime changes
The rst panel shows the number of rms with foreign securities in 1997 under Suharto and in 2001 under
Wahid. In the second panel, we report changes in securities for closely connected and less connected rms,
respectively. A rm is considered close to Suharto if its Closeness Index exceeds the median value for our
sample. The bottom panel reports two specications. The rst is a probit model for the 101 rms that did not have
foreign securities in 1997. The dependent variable takes on a value of 1 if the rm had a publicly traded foreign
security in 2001 and zero otherwise. Closeness to Suharto is the log stock return over six news events indicating
that President Suharto is in bad health, multiplied by 1. Firm size is the log of total assets in millions of rupiah.
ROA is the ratio of operating income to total assets. Capital intensity is the ratio of xed assets to total
assets. Financial leverage is the ratio of long-term debt to total assets. Industry indicators are included for
agriculture, manufacturing, trade, and nance. Standard errors (in parentheses) are clustered based on group
afliations reported by Fisman (2001) and Claessens et al. (2000). The second specication is an ordered probit
model. The dependent variable is 1 (rm no longer has a foreign security), 0 (no change in foreign security), or 1
(issued new security), respectively. The sample consists of all rms from our original sample that survived. The
covariates are as described above. We denote (two-sided) levels of statistical signicance as follows: y signicant at
10%, * signicant at 5%, ** signicant at 1%.

Securities under Suharto and Wahid

Firms with foreign securities in Firms without foreign securities in


2001 2001
Firms with foreign securities in 16 5
1997
Firms without foreign securities in 12 89
1997

Changes in securities, by strength of connections

Firms close to Suharto Other Firms


Issued new foreign security 9 3
No change 50 55
Gave up foreign security 2 3
Securities and closeness

Foreign securities in 2001 (but not Changes in new securities


in 1997)
Closeness to Suharto 3.299 1.950
(1.756)y (0.825)*
Firm size 0.726 0.170
(0.250)** (0.103)y
ROA 5.070 1.271
(3.522) (2.173)
Capital intensity 0.466 0.221)
(0.734) (0.774
Financial leverage 2.698 2.420
(1.426)y (0.959)**
Industry Included Included
Constant 17.128
(5.660)**

Observations 101 122


Pseudo R2 0.432 0.139
ARTICLE IN PRESS
436 C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439

increase in closeness increases the likelihood of having new foreign securities by 2.5
percentage points. This effect is statistically signicant at the 1.8% level.
The results in Tables 6 and 7 provide support for the view that political regime changes
have signicant consequences for the performance of companies that invested in political
relationships and for the strategies that these companies adopt once a new government is
in power. They also corroborate our earlier ndings on the link between global nancing
and political connections.

8. Conclusions

In this study, we examine the role of political connections for rms nancing strategies
and their long-run nancial performance. We view political connections as an example of
domestic arrangements that reduce the benets of global nancing. Consistent with this
argument, our rst set of results shows that well-connected rms are less likely to have
publicly traded debt or equity securities abroad, suggesting that connections and global
nancing are substitutes. We also provide return-based evidence that rms derive
signicant benets from both foreign securities and political connections before and during
the Asian crisis. For this reason, it is important to consider domestic arrangements, such as
political connections, when estimating the performance benets of global nancing.
There are at least three explanations for our ndings. First, well-connected rms have
access to preferential nancing at home and therefore do not need to access foreign capital
markets. Second, rms with political ties dislike the transparency and scrutiny that come
with publicly traded securities. Third, foreign securities make it more difcult for insiders
to extract private control benets. Although the exact mechanism is not central to our
study and conclusions, we make one attempt to shed some light on the question of whether
the transparency consequences of foreign securities play a role in our ndings. We show
that Indonesian rms with close ties to the Suharto regime were as likely as non-connected
rms to have privately arranged foreign securities, which allow access to global capital
markets but do not come with the same outside scrutiny as publicly traded securities. Thus,
the distinction between private and public securities appears to matter. While this nding is
not a full explanation of why connected rms are less likely to have foreign securities, it is
consistent with the view that the informational consequences of publicly traded securities
play some role in the documented tradeoff between political connections and foreign
nancing.
Our second set of results documents the nancial consequences of regime changes for
rms with strong political ties to Suharto. We nd that closely connected rms
underperformed during the Asian nancial crisis as long as Suharto was in power,
recovered under Suhartos long-time ally Habibie, but signicantly underperformed under
Wahid, a cleric critical of the Suharto regime. This return pattern suggests that rms have
difculty re-establishing connections with a new government when their patrons fall from
power. Given these difculties, we document that Suharto rms are more likely to issue
publicly traded foreign securities after Wahids surprise election. This evidence further
supports the link between global nancing and political connections.
Two broader conclusions emerge from our ndings. First, the results shed light on the
difculties of institutional reform and capital market liberalization in emerging market
economies like Indonesia. Well-connected rms do not nd global nancing very
attractive. As a result, the opening up of capital markets is likely to remain limited in
ARTICLE IN PRESS
C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439 437

economies where political connections remain important (Stulz, 2005). To the extent that
foreign nancing strengthens the competitive position of less connected rms, rms with
strong political connections can be expected to resist changes in domestic institutions that
facilitate global nancing, such as increases in corporate transparency (Rajan and
Zingales, 2003). Institutional reform in this environment promises to be particularly
difcult because it is the rms with political clout that prefer less nancial liberalization
(Chui et al., 2000).
A second conclusion relates to research on rms operating in relationship-based
economic systems. A growing literature investigates the performance effects of adopting
corporate strategies that are consistent with the Anglo-Saxon model of arms-length
nance. In many of these analyses, rms that pursue market-based strategies are compared
to rms that do not. To make valid empirical inferences, however, it is important to
recognize that these decisions are likely to be endogenously determined. In a relationship-
based economy, rms with weak connections (e.g., to political regimes or banks) have the
strongest incentives to rely on market-based transactions. Unless this is taken into account,
the debate about the performance and valuation effects of greater corporate transparency
and improved governance is likely to be misinformed.

References

Aghion, P., Bacchetta, P., Banerjee, A., 2001. Currency crises and monetary policy in an economy with credit
constraints. European Economic Review 45 (7), 11211150.
Alesina, A., 1988. Credibility and political convergences in a two-party system with rational voters. American
Economic Review 78, 796805.
Austen-Smith, D., 1997. Interest groups: money, information, and inuence. In: Mueller, D. (Ed.), Perspectives
on Public Choice: A Handbook. Cambridge, pp. 296321.
Backman, M., 2001. Asian Eclipse: Exposing the Dark Side of Business in Asia. Wiley, Singapore.
Baek, J., Kang, J., Park, K., 2004. Corporate governance and rm value: evidence from the Korean nancial
crisis. Journal of Financial Economics 71 (2), 265314.
Baker, K., Nofsinger, J., Weaver, D., 2002. International cross-listing and visibility. Journal of Financial and
Quantitative Analysis 37, 495521.
Baron, D., 2001. Theory of strategic nonmarket participation: majority-rule and executive institutions. Journal of
Economics & Management Strategy 10 (1), 4789.
BBC News, 2000. No pardon for Tommy Suharto. At: /http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacic/
955578.stmS, accessed on 5 March 2005.
Bekaert, G., Harvey, C., Lumsdaine, R., 2002. Dating the integration of world equity markets. Journal of
Financial Economics 65 (2), 203247.
Bernheim, B., Whinston, M., 1986. Menu auctions, resource allocation, and economic inuence. The Quarterly
Journal of Economics 101 (1), 131.
Bleakley, H., Cowan, K., 2002. Corporate dollar debt and depreciations: much ado about nothing? Working
paper 02-5. Federal Reserve Bank of Boston.
Borsuk, R., 1993. Outcry unlikely to hinder Barito Pacics stock issue. The Asian Wall Street Journal 07/16/
1993, 1.
Center for Public Integrity, 2005. Indonesia, Corruption Timeline. At: /http://www.public-i.org/ga/country.
aspx?cc=id&act=timelineS, accessed on 1 May 2005.
Cheung, S., Rau, R., Stouraitis, A., 2004. Tunneling, propping and expropriation: evidence from connected party
transactions in Hong Kong. Unpublished working paper. City University of Hong Kong and Purdue
University.
Cheung, S., Jing, L., Rau, R., Stouraitis, A., 2005. Guanxi, political connections, and expropriation: the dark side
of state ownership in Chinese listed companies. Unpublished working paper. City University of Hong Kong
and Purdue University.
ARTICLE IN PRESS
438 C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439

Chui, A., Titman, S., Wei, K., 2000. Corporate groups, nancial liberalization and growth: the case of Indonesia.
Working paper. Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong Kong.
Claessens, S., Djankov, S., Lang, L., 2000. The separation of ownership and control in East Asian corporations.
Journal of Financial Economics 58 (12), 81112.
Coffee, J., 1999. The future as history: the prospects for global convergence in corporate governance and its
implications. Northwestern University Law Review 641708.
Coffee, J., 2002. Racing towards the top? the impact of cross-listings and stock market competition on
international corporate governance. Columbia Law Review 102 (7), 17571832.
Cohen, M., 1998. To the barricades: as economic hardship mounts, student protests are gaining support from
other segments of societyand starting to look like a nationwide movement. Far Eastern Economic Review
5/14/1998, 23.
Colmey, J., Liebhold, D., 1999. The family rmSuharto Inc. Time Asia, May 24, 12.
Demirguc-Kunt, A., Maksimovic, V., 2002. Funding growth in bank-based and market-based nancial systems:
evidence from rm-level data. Journal of Financial Economics 65, 337363.
Doidge, C., Karolyi, G., Stulz, R., 2004. Why are foreign rms listed in the U.S. worth more? Journal of Financial
Economics 71 (2), 205238.
Errunza, V., Miller, D., 2000. Market segmentation and the cost of capital in international equity markets.
Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 35 (4), 577600.
Faccio, M., 2002. Politically connected rms: can they squeeze the state? Unpublished working paper. University
of Notre Dame, Indiana.
Fanto, A., 1996. The absence of cross-cultural communication: SEC mandatory disclosure and foreign corporate
governance. Journal of International Law and Business 17, 119207.
Fisman, R., 2001. Estimating the value of political connections. American Economic Review 91 (4),
10951102.
Friedman, E., Johnson, S., Mitton, T., 2003. Propping and tunneling. Journal of Comparative Economics 31 (4),
732751.
Grossman, G., Helpman, E., 1994. Protection for sale. American Economic Review 84 (4), 833850.
Hail, L., Leuz, C., 2004. Cost of capital and cash ow effects of U.S. cross listings. Unpublished working paper.
University of Pennsylvania.
Harvey, C., Roper, A., 1999. The Asian bet. In: Harwood, A., Litan, R., Pomerleano, M. (Eds.), Financial
Markets and Development: The Crisis in Emerging Markets. Washington, DC, pp. 29115.
Head, J., 1998. Prole: President BJ Habibie. BBC News. At /http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/events/indonesia/
proles/98092.stmS, accessed on 1 August 2005.
Healy, P., Palepu, K., 2001. Information asymmetry, corporate disclosure, and the capital markets: a review of the
empirical disclosure literature. Journal of Accounting and Economics 31, 405440.
Johnson, S., Mitton, T., 2003. Cronyism and capital controls: evidence from Malaysia. Journal of Financial
Economics 67 (2), 351382.
Johnson, S., Boone, P., Breach, A., Friedman, E., 2000. Corporate governance in the Asian nancial crisis.
Journal of Financial Economics 58, 141186.
Karolyi, G., 1998. Why do companies list their shares abroad? a survey of the evidence and its managerial
implications. Salomon Brothers Monograph Series 7(1), New York University, New York.
Karpoff, J., Lee, D., Martin, G., 2005. The cost to rms of cooking the books. Unpublished working paper.
University of Washington and Texas A&M University.
Khanna, T., Palepu, K., 2000. Is group afliation protable in emerging markets? an analysis of diversied Indian
business groups. Journal of Finance 55 (2), 867891.
Kroszner, R., Strahan, P., 1999. What drives deregulation? economics and politics of the relaxation of bank
branching restrictions. Quarterly Journal of Economics 114 (4), 14371467.
Krugman, P., 1999. Balance sheets, the transfer problem, and nancial crises. International Tax & Public Finance
6 (4), 459472.
La Porta, R., Lopez-de-Silanes, F., Shleifer, A., Vishny, R., 2000. Investor protection and corporate governance.
Journal of Financial Economics 58, 327.
Lang, M., Lins, K., Miller, D., 2003. ADRs, analysts, and accuracy: does cross listing in the U.S. improve a rms
information environment and increase market value? Journal of Accounting Research 41, 317362.
Lemmon, M., Lins, K., 2003. Ownership structure, corporate governance, and rm value: evidence from the East
Asian nancial crisis. Journal of Finance 58, 14451468.
ARTICLE IN PRESS
C. Leuz, F. Oberholzer-Gee / Journal of Financial Economics 81 (2006) 411439 439

Licht, A., 2001. Managerial opportunism and foreign listing: some direct evidence. University of Pennsylvania
Journal of International Economic Law 22, 325348.
McBeth, J., 1994. Banking on friends: business and politics mix in Bapindo case. Far Eastern Economic Review
25.
Merton, R., 1987. A simple model of capital market equilibrium with incomplete information. Journal of Finance
42, 483510.
Mitton, T., 2002. A cross-rm analysis of the impact of corporate governance on the East Asian nancial crisis.
Journal of Financial Economics 64 (2), 215242.
Persson, T., 1998. Economic policy and special interest politics. Economic Journal 108 (447), 310327.
Rajan, R., Zingales, L., 2003. The great reversals: the politics of nancial development in the twentieth century.
Journal of Financial Economics 69 (1), 551.
Reese, W., Weisbach, M., 2002. Protection of minority shareholder interests, cross-listings in the United States,
and subsequent equity offerings. Journal of Financial Economics 66, 65104.
Rodrik, D., 1995. Political economy of trade policy. In: Grossman, G., Rogoff, K. (Eds.), Handbook of
International Economics, vol. 3. Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp. 14571494.
Saudagaran, S., 1988. An empirical study of selected factors inuencing the decision to list on foreign stock
exchanges. Journal of International Business Studies, 101127.
Saudagaran, S., Biddle, G., 1995. Foreign listing location: a study of MNCs and stock exchanges in eight
countries. Journal of International Business Studies, 319341.
Shari, M., 1998. A tycoon under siege. Business Week. 28/09/1998, p. 26.
Siegel, J., 2005. Can foreign rms bond themselves effectively by renting U.S. securities laws? Journal of Financial
Economics 75, 319359.
Smith, R., Blundell, R., 1986. An exogeneity test for a simultaneous equation Tobit model with an application to
labor supply. Econometrica 54 (4), 679686.
Solomon, J., 1999. Indonesia to investigate Suharto over state-bank loan to rm. The Wall Street Journal 12/01/
1999, A23.
Stigler, G., 1971. The theory of economic regulation. Bell Journal of Economics and Management Science 2, 321.
Stiglitz, J., 1998. The role of international nancial institutions in the current global economy. Address to the
Chicago Council on Foreign Relations, February 27.
Stulz, R., 1981. On the effects of barriers to international investment. Journal of Finance 36, 923934.
Stulz, R., 1999. Globalization, corporate nance, and the cost of capital. Journal of Applied Corporate Finance
26, 328.
Stulz, R., 2005. The limits of nancial globalization, presidential address at the AFA meetings. Working paper.
Ohio State University.
Symonds, P., 1998. Who is B.J. Habibie? At: /http://www.wsws.org/news/1998/may1998/hab-m22.shtmlS,
accessed on 12 March 2005.
Tabalujan, B., 2002. Why indonesian corporate governance failedconjectures concerning legal culture.
Columbia Journal of Asia Law, Spring 2002.
Tesoro, J.M., 1999. Business scandals: past versus future. AsiaWeek, 24 December.
Wiwattanakantang, Y., Kali, R., Charumlind, C., 2006. Connected lending: Thailand before the nancial crisis.
Journal of Business 79 (1), 181217.

You might also like