Geographical Diversification and Firm Value in the Financial Sector
Journal
Journal of Empirical Finance
ISSN
0927-5398
ISSN-Digital
1879-1727
Type
journal article
Date Issued
2012-01
Author(s)
Walter, Ingo
Abstract
This paper investigates whether geographic diversification is value-enhancing or value-destroying in the financial services sector, broadly defined. Our dataset comprises approximately 3,579 observations over the period from 1985 to 2004 and covers the entire range of U.S. financial intermediaries - commercial banks, investment banks, insurance companies, asset managers, and financial infrastructure services firms. We use two alternative measures of geographic diversification: (1) a dummy variable whether the firm reports more than one geographic segment and (2) the percentage of sales from non-domestic operations. Our results indicate that geographic diversification is not associated with a significant valuation discount in financial intermediaries. However, when accounting for the firms' main activity-areas, we find evidence of a significant discount associated with geographic diversification in securities firms and a premium in credit intermediaries and insurance companies. All these results are robust after taking into account functional diversification of the firms as well as a potential endogeneity of both functional and geographic diversification.
Language
English
Keywords
Geographic diversification
Functional diversification
Organizational structure
Financial intermediaries
Firm valuation
HSG Classification
contribution to scientific community
Refereed
Yes
Publisher
Elsevier
Publisher place
Amsterdam
Volume
19
Number
1
Start page
109
End page
122
Pages
14
Subject(s)
Division(s)
Eprints ID
210166