Capital structure, working capital management and potential growth of a business: the case of the Sri Lankan stockbroking industry / Chamil Wansaja Senarathne and Viraj Malawana.

The objective of this paper is to examine the financial and strategic implications of regulatory restrictions for working capital management of firms operating in the stockbroking industry. The present regulatory frameworks require banks and other financial services sector firms to have more equity...

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Main Authors: Senarathne, Chamil Wansaja, Malawana, Viraj
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Accounting Research Institute and UiTM Press 2019
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Online Access:http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/29363/1/29363.pdf
http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/29363/
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spelling my.uitm.ir.293632020-04-09T05:11:14Z http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/29363/ Capital structure, working capital management and potential growth of a business: the case of the Sri Lankan stockbroking industry / Chamil Wansaja Senarathne and Viraj Malawana. Senarathne, Chamil Wansaja Malawana, Viraj Stockbrokers. Security dealers. Investment advisers. Online stockbrokers The objective of this paper is to examine the financial and strategic implications of regulatory restrictions for working capital management of firms operating in the stockbroking industry. The present regulatory frameworks require banks and other financial services sector firms to have more equity capital in the capital base, without regard to the financial and operating characteristics of the firms. Based on the Sri Lankan stockbroking industry, this paper shows how the return on equity deteriorates and potential growth restricted, when the regulations require firms to deduct certain assets from the capital base to meet the minimum capital requirements. The results show that the potential growth and return on equity reduce substantially after compliance with the regulation. Further, the regulation restricts a firm’s attempt to diversify the collateral portfolio in the market in order to reduce the systematic risk attached to the securities in the collateral portfolio. These regulatory restrictions also add an additional stress level to corporate management to leverage the number of times of sales (sales turnover) in order to overcome the issue, which may result in overtrading. It may also create ethical issues on soliciting clients and induce them to trade in the stock market, without proper justifications. Accounting Research Institute and UiTM Press 2019-04 Article PeerReviewed text en http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/29363/1/29363.pdf Senarathne, Chamil Wansaja and Malawana, Viraj (2019) Capital structure, working capital management and potential growth of a business: the case of the Sri Lankan stockbroking industry / Chamil Wansaja Senarathne and Viraj Malawana. Asia-Pacific Management Accounting Journal (APMAJ), 14 (1). pp. 19-41. ISSN 2550-1631
institution Universiti Teknologi Mara
building Tun Abdul Razak Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Mara
content_source UiTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://ir.uitm.edu.my/
language English
topic Stockbrokers. Security dealers. Investment advisers. Online stockbrokers
spellingShingle Stockbrokers. Security dealers. Investment advisers. Online stockbrokers
Senarathne, Chamil Wansaja
Malawana, Viraj
Capital structure, working capital management and potential growth of a business: the case of the Sri Lankan stockbroking industry / Chamil Wansaja Senarathne and Viraj Malawana.
description The objective of this paper is to examine the financial and strategic implications of regulatory restrictions for working capital management of firms operating in the stockbroking industry. The present regulatory frameworks require banks and other financial services sector firms to have more equity capital in the capital base, without regard to the financial and operating characteristics of the firms. Based on the Sri Lankan stockbroking industry, this paper shows how the return on equity deteriorates and potential growth restricted, when the regulations require firms to deduct certain assets from the capital base to meet the minimum capital requirements. The results show that the potential growth and return on equity reduce substantially after compliance with the regulation. Further, the regulation restricts a firm’s attempt to diversify the collateral portfolio in the market in order to reduce the systematic risk attached to the securities in the collateral portfolio. These regulatory restrictions also add an additional stress level to corporate management to leverage the number of times of sales (sales turnover) in order to overcome the issue, which may result in overtrading. It may also create ethical issues on soliciting clients and induce them to trade in the stock market, without proper justifications.
format Article
author Senarathne, Chamil Wansaja
Malawana, Viraj
author_facet Senarathne, Chamil Wansaja
Malawana, Viraj
author_sort Senarathne, Chamil Wansaja
title Capital structure, working capital management and potential growth of a business: the case of the Sri Lankan stockbroking industry / Chamil Wansaja Senarathne and Viraj Malawana.
title_short Capital structure, working capital management and potential growth of a business: the case of the Sri Lankan stockbroking industry / Chamil Wansaja Senarathne and Viraj Malawana.
title_full Capital structure, working capital management and potential growth of a business: the case of the Sri Lankan stockbroking industry / Chamil Wansaja Senarathne and Viraj Malawana.
title_fullStr Capital structure, working capital management and potential growth of a business: the case of the Sri Lankan stockbroking industry / Chamil Wansaja Senarathne and Viraj Malawana.
title_full_unstemmed Capital structure, working capital management and potential growth of a business: the case of the Sri Lankan stockbroking industry / Chamil Wansaja Senarathne and Viraj Malawana.
title_sort capital structure, working capital management and potential growth of a business: the case of the sri lankan stockbroking industry / chamil wansaja senarathne and viraj malawana.
publisher Accounting Research Institute and UiTM Press
publishDate 2019
url http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/29363/1/29363.pdf
http://ir.uitm.edu.my/id/eprint/29363/
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