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Browsing by Subject "Stock market reaction"
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Item The financial impact of product recall announcements in China(2013) Zhao, Xiande; Li, Yina; Flynn, Barbara B.A product recall can be viewed as a firm’s worst nightmare. Although the long-term damage to brand equity and company reputation may be difficult, if not impossible, to quantify, the short-term impact on shareholders’ wealth is readily estimable. While many studies have examined this issue in the Western context, little is known about the financial impact of a product recall announcement in China. To advance the knowledge about the financial impact of a product recall announcement, we explore this issue using event study methodology. In general, our findings are congruent with previous research that product recalls result in negative abnormal returns. Interestingly, however, we found that Chinese companies suffered from greater financial losses than their Western counterparts did. This study also provides evidence that the Chinese food industry experiences a more severe stock market reaction than the automobile industry and that a passive recall strategy was associated with a more negative stock market reaction than a proactive recall strategy. We conclude with several future research avenues for global research on product recalls.Item The Impact of Product Recall Announcements on Stock Market Reaction: a Study of Chinese Listed Companies(2009) Zhao, Xiande; Lee, Yina; Ng, Stephen; Flynn, Barbara B.Product recalls can be viewed as a firm or nation’s worst nightmare. Though the magnitude of the loss of brand equity and reputation due to a recall is difficult to directly estimate, the impact of a recall on shareholder wealth is more easily quantified. Based on a sample of 29 product recall announcements by Chinese listed companies during the period 2002 to 2008, the effects of the stock market reaction to them was examined. Consistent with previous research in the United States market, we found a significant negative abnormal return in the Chinese market, but also found that Chinese companies suffered greater financial losses from product recalls. The results also revealed that Chinese companies in the food industry experienced more severe reactions from their recall announcements, while companies in automobile industry experienced a less severe reaction in their stock prices. We briefly describe the case of the melamine tainted milk crisis in China and investigate the stock market reaction, for both affected companies and their competitors. The results show that all of the affected companies suffered from significant negative financial losses, while their competitors benefitted from the recall.