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<title>Theses and Dissertations (Financial Intelligence)</title>
<link>https://ir.unisa.ac.za/handle/10500/25025</link>
<description/>
<pubDate>Fri, 01 May 2026 21:45:23 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-05-01T21:45:23Z</dc:date>
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<title>Voluntary disclosure, long-horizon investors and shareholder familiarity : an online investor relations perspective</title>
<link>https://ir.unisa.ac.za/handle/10500/23727</link>
<description>Voluntary disclosure, long-horizon investors and shareholder familiarity : an online investor relations perspective
Esterhuyse, Leana
Empirical evidence indicates that companies that reduce information asymmetry by&#13;
increased voluntary disclosures achieve several benefits, such as lower cost of capital,&#13;
improved pricing, and liquidity of their shares. Despite the possibility of such benefits,&#13;
many studies report varying degrees of voluntary disclosure behaviour that is&#13;
attributable to various factors. Recent studies indicate that investors’ investment&#13;
horizon has a significant effect on actions taken by management. Companies with&#13;
predominantly short-horizon investors spend less on research and development, invest&#13;
in shorter-term projects that are less profitable than longer-term projects, and are more&#13;
likely to manipulate earnings to meet short-term earnings expectations. This study&#13;
investigates whether investors’ investment horizon has an effect on the quality of&#13;
companies’ information environment.&#13;
Long-horizon investors should be familiar with their investee company’s risks and&#13;
rewards, using both their own internal information gathering processes and the&#13;
cumulative information disclosed by management over time. Moreover, over the&#13;
course of a long-term relationship, they can become familiar with management’s&#13;
capability to deliver long-term sustainable returns. Long-horizon investors should&#13;
therefore be less concerned with short-term fluctuations of earnings and&#13;
management’s public explanations and disclosures thereof. I hypothesise that higher&#13;
(lower) proportions of long-horizon investors are associated with lower (higher) quality&#13;
voluntary disclosure.&#13;
The shareholder familiarity hypothesis was tested in this study, using an ordinary least&#13;
squares regression. Voluntary disclosures were observed via the channel of&#13;
companies’ websites. A checklist was compiled of best practices for online investor&#13;
relations, and content analyses were conducted on the websites of 205 companies&#13;
listed on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange. Shareholder familiarity was proxied by&#13;
shareholder stability, measured over nine years. The stability measure was lagged by&#13;
one year to create a temporal difference between the shareholder profile and&#13;
disclosure behaviour. I found that companies with a profile of unstable investors that&#13;
are larger, younger, dual-listed and have a Big4 auditor have higher quality online investor relations practices. The hypothesis of a negative association between&#13;
shareholder familiarity and voluntary disclosure quality is therefore accepted.&#13;
This study extends the theory on information asymmetry and voluntary disclosure by&#13;
providing evidence supporting the argument that investor horizon is a predictor of&#13;
voluntary disclosure quality. The dictum of more is better does not hold in all scenarios.&#13;
It is important for financial directors and investor relations officers to establish the&#13;
investment horizon profile of their respective companies’ shareholders before they&#13;
embark on extensive disclosure programmes.
</description>
<pubDate>Sat, 01 Apr 2017 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2017-04-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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