We exploit parent- and subsidiary-level data for publicly listed firms in Thailand before, during, and after the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis to investigate the extent to which firms with different types of ownership restructure their business portfolios, in terms of divestitures and acquisitions. We compare restructuring choices made by firms mostly owned by (a) domestic individuals with block shares (family firms), (b) domestic firms and/or institutions (DI firms), and (c) foreign investors (foreign firms). We show that following the crisis (1) foreign firms' restructuring behavior is the least affected; (2) domestic firms owned by families and domestic institutions (DI) behave similarly to one another; (3) domestic firms do not increase d...
Abstract. Corporate turnarounds have been studied widely in Western contexts, but few empirical stud...
This study aimed to find important constructs and relationships among models of subsidiary divestmen...
This paper reveals why foreign ownership participation matters in the sensitivity relationship betwe...
This study examines the impact of divestiture on financially distressed firms during the 2008 global...
This thesis examines three separate topics related to corporate asset restructurings involving merg...
Thailand experienced a down turn in the economy during the financial crisis in 1997. The fundamental...
This paper examines why companies decide to divest a subsidiary in a corporate environment character...
Financial crises in emerging market economies induce diverging patterns of ownership stakes and subs...
We examine changes to corporate ownership in nine East Asian countries following the 1997 Asian Fina...
In this paper, we claim that ownership is a key determinant of the firms' divestment-reinvestment se...
A sample of firms that focus by divesting at least one segment allows us to investigate the characte...
We examine the differential response of establishments to the recent global financial crisis with pa...
This paper provides evidence for the immediate or short-term responses to financial crises of US mul...
Divestitures of property, plant and equipment (PPE) assets are a common form of corporate restructur...
This paper investigates how business groups in Thailand had evolved since the 1950s. We argue that p...
Abstract. Corporate turnarounds have been studied widely in Western contexts, but few empirical stud...
This study aimed to find important constructs and relationships among models of subsidiary divestmen...
This paper reveals why foreign ownership participation matters in the sensitivity relationship betwe...
This study examines the impact of divestiture on financially distressed firms during the 2008 global...
This thesis examines three separate topics related to corporate asset restructurings involving merg...
Thailand experienced a down turn in the economy during the financial crisis in 1997. The fundamental...
This paper examines why companies decide to divest a subsidiary in a corporate environment character...
Financial crises in emerging market economies induce diverging patterns of ownership stakes and subs...
We examine changes to corporate ownership in nine East Asian countries following the 1997 Asian Fina...
In this paper, we claim that ownership is a key determinant of the firms' divestment-reinvestment se...
A sample of firms that focus by divesting at least one segment allows us to investigate the characte...
We examine the differential response of establishments to the recent global financial crisis with pa...
This paper provides evidence for the immediate or short-term responses to financial crises of US mul...
Divestitures of property, plant and equipment (PPE) assets are a common form of corporate restructur...
This paper investigates how business groups in Thailand had evolved since the 1950s. We argue that p...
Abstract. Corporate turnarounds have been studied widely in Western contexts, but few empirical stud...
This study aimed to find important constructs and relationships among models of subsidiary divestmen...
This paper reveals why foreign ownership participation matters in the sensitivity relationship betwe...