Abstract
The 1980s and 1990s saw a remarkable increase in international financial integration of many OECD countries but left many small emerging and developing countries outside this ‘global’ financial market. In the integration process as described in Oxelheim (1996), the Nordic economies were able to foster a large number of high-growth capital-intensive companies, such as Nokia from Finland, Ericsson from Sweden, and Novo-Nordisk from Denmark. We argue that without the skillful global financial strategies that enabled these companies to access global savings, the limited domestic availability and high cost of capital would have hampered their growth. We suggest that these companies’ historical accounts provide valuable insight for scholars as well as for executives today, in particular for smaller and medium-sized growth-oriented firms from emerging economies. In order to succeed in a global financial market, firms’ executives must be capable of delivering the strategy story to the stock analysts and, ultimately, share value to the money managers (Useem, 1998). We find that Useem’s argument is equally true today. The ongoing globalization of equity markets provides the firm the opportunity to actively reduce information and agency costs, and hence to contribute to higher firm values by the means of lower cost of capital (Bekaert and Harvey, 2000; Doidge et al., 2004; Hearn et al., 2010; Mittoo and Zhang, 2008) and better corporate governance (Coffee, 2002; Oxelheim and Randøy, 2003).
Originalsprog | Engelsk |
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Titel | Handbook of Research on International Strategic Management |
Redaktører | Alain Verbeke, Hemant Merchant |
Antal sider | 16 |
Udgivelsessted | Cheltenham |
Forlag | Edward Elgar Publishing |
Publikationsdato | 2012 |
Sider | 238-253 |
Kapitel | 12 |
ISBN (Trykt) | 9781847201935 |
ISBN (Elektronisk) | 9781781009147 |
DOI | |
Status | Udgivet - 2012 |
Udgivet eksternt | Ja |