key: cord-0755108-trn06b2n authors: Venkatesh, Hari; Kumari, Jyoti; Hiremath, Gourishankar S.; Roy, Hiranmoy title: Foreign Institutional Investors: Fair-Weather Friends or Smart Traders? date: 2021-04-03 journal: J Quant Econ DOI: 10.1007/s40953-021-00233-3 sha: c44e7b04e2b436dc0b0c5a370559b113c00fd0b9 doc_id: 755108 cord_uid: trn06b2n We examine a theoretically robust but previously undocumented issue of what drives foreign portfolio investments into emerging markets. Foreign institutional investors (FIIs) are often blamed as fair-weather friends who pull out their investment at the first sign of trouble. Using a bottom-up approach, we explore this possibility. We demonstrate the influence of the firm-specific factors such as size, book to market ratio, the riskiness of the stocks, stock prices, dividend yield, liquidity, leverage, and earnings on the FII ownership. We find no evidence to show foreign investors as fair-weather friends. Instead, they are smart traders who follow a diligent investment strategy. We suggest reforms in corporate governance and improvement in financial fundamentals of the companies to attract FII ownership. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s40953-021-00233-3. Foreign direct investment (FDI) and foreign portfolio investment (FPI) are the most important channels of capital flows into emerging and developing economies (EDEs). The higher returns and international portfolio diversification are primary drivers of FPI in the emerging stock markets (ESMs) (Solnik 1974) . The remarkable increase in the FPI in ESMs and the consequences of integration of these economies with the developed markets has prompted passionate debate in the international finance literature and policy circles. The FPI flows help bridge the gap between investment requirements and domestic savings in ESMs. However, the reversal of capital flows aggravates crises in the host markets (see Furman et al. 1998 ). Therefore, academics and policymakers alike raise concerns about the behavior of FPI flows. The foreign institutional investors (FII) 1 are often accused as fair-weather friends who pull out investment at the first sign of trouble. International finance literature predominantly focuses on the costs and benefits of investment in emerging markets to international investors. A strand of literature attempts to understand the relationship between FPI flows and host market returns (e.g., Froot et al. 2001; Richards 2005) . Nonetheless, the research on what determines the business of foreign investors in EDEs is not probed before. The available research on determinants of portfolio investment emphasizes global factors (e.g., Taylor and Sarno 1997) . Gupta and Gordon (2003) argue that FIIs follow a top-down approach relying more on macroeconomic and political factors to choose ESMs. In contrast, FPI flows are more appropriately belong to the 'theory of the firm' than the global macro environment (Kang and Stulz 1997; Dahlquist and Robertsson 2001) . These investors follow a bottom-up method to choose top quality firms and hardly be concerned about the macroeconomic factors (Sharma 2002) . Kang and Stulz (1997) are the first to show the relevance of company-specific factors in investment decisions of foreign equity investors than the national portfolio investors. Lin and Shiu (2003) and Batten and Vo (2015) emphasize characteristics of the firms as drivers of foreign ownership of stocks in emerging markets. A smart investment strategy comprises top-down and bottom-up approaches, and global investors are no exception to this bottom line. A company analysis to pick stocks is as essential as selecting an emerging market based on the macroeconomic environment for portfolio diversification. The financials of the company are the primary factors in investment decisions. Of late, corporate governance moved to the heart of investment decisions, especially among investors from developed markets (McKinsey 2002) . Moreover, the financial performance of firms is positively associated with corporate governance (Mohanty 2003; Bebchuk et al. 2009 ). The growing literature in corporate governance indicates the reluctance of foreign investors to invest in stocks of companies with poor corporate governance (Mangena and Tauringana 2007) . Hence, the investigation of the firm-level factors influencing the investment decisions of FPI is indispensable. In this light, we employ a bottom-up approach to understand the determinants of foreign ownership of domestic stocks in EDEs such as India. We draw the sample from India, the second-fastest growing economy, for the empirical investigation. One of the critical features of the Indian stock market has been the rapid increase in the level of stock ownership by foreign investors as non-promoters from 3.25 percent to 29.02 percent in 2016 ("Recent trends in FPI ownership and stylized facts" section). Similarly, India is one of the few countries that witnessed FPI inflows during the postglobal finance crisis (GFC). We hypothesize that foreign investors follow the principle of investment analysis, and thus firm-level factors are vital for their choice of stocks. Further, we also test our proposition that foreign investors emphasize corporate governance in their decision to invest in host markets. The previous work on emerging markets mainly perceives these markets as homogenous. Such a homogeneity bias (Hiremath 2017) hides the unique characteristics of the market and leads to incorrect inferences and policy prescriptions. Moreover, inferences from cross-country analysis are inapplicable to India due to its heterogeneity among the emerging markets. We use a comprehensive framework to include the information on the firm-level financials and corporate governance indicators to gain essential insights into the determinants of FPI flows. This holistic approach dispels the speculative views on foreign investors and offers practical and pragmatic implications for international investment. In this context, this study assumes significance. We contribute to the literature in many folds. First, we present a set of new facts and trend analyses of FPI flow at the aggregate level and FII ownership of individual stocks. Our research helps understand the motives of foreign investors and business strategies in EDEs. Second, we incorporate both the firm-specific financial and corporate governance determinants of foreign ownership of Indian stocks. Previous researchers focused on macroeconomic factors. These studies especially suggest that the global environment alone influences the decisions of foreign investors to invest in ESMs. Third, we also add new firm-level factors such as a firm's visibility and protection of minority shareholders. The inclusion of essential variables expands the scope of our work and provides robustness to the results. Fifth, unlike previous empirical studies, we use the panel data framework to investigate the significant factors determining foreign ownership in Indian stocks. These empirical analyses offer a better understanding of investors' choices (Baltagi and Kao 2001; Hsiao 2007) . Besides, we use alternative models to ensure the robustness and general applicability of the results. We find that firm-specific factors are the primary drivers of the FII ownership in India. We also show that corporate governance practices influence global investors' decisions to invest in a particular stock. The rest of the paper is organized as follows: we present recent trends in FPI ownership of Indian stocks and stylized facts related to such flows in "Recent trends in FPI ownership and stylized facts" section. We discuss the empirical results in "Determinants of foreign ownership of domestic stocks" section and conclude our study with implication for policy and equity analysis in the last section. India has witnessed a surge of private capital flows during the post-liberalization period (Fig. 1) . The flows increased from $244 million in 1992-93 and reached $40,922 million in 2014-15 (accounting for 168 times during 20 years). Nevertheless, FPI flows were volatile and reversed due to the East Asian currency crisis (1997) and the dot-com bubble burst (2000) (2001) (2002) . The unprecedented outflows to the tune of $15,017 million in 2008-09 due to GFC caused anxiety in the Indian stock market, and total portfolio investment flows to India were plunged further. After the intermediate slowdown, the FPI continued to flow into the Indian capital market in the post-crisis period. The FPI trends replicate all anecdotes of the business cycle with booms and busts. Indian government allowed firms to raise capital by issuing depositary receipts such as American depositary receipts (ADRs) and Global depository receipts (GDRs) in 1992. Nevertheless, FII constitutes a significant portion of the FPI flows, whereas the share of ADRs and GDRs is meager. The 8735 FII firms registered with the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) are mainly from the United States (34.53%), followed by Luxembourg (11.51%), Canada (7.49%), Mauritius (6.87%), Ireland (5.80%) and the UK (5.47%) (Fig. 2) . FII flows into India are mainly from developed countries, whereas sizeable portfolio investment comes from developing markets. FII from Mauritius, Cayman Island, Bahamas, Brunei, Bermuda, Liechtenstein, Republic of Slovenia, Guernsey, and Jersey also hold notable ownership of Indian stocks because of the tax advantages. 2 FII ownership in India's equity shares considerably increased during the study period and accounted for one-fourth of the total market value. The FIIs hold a significant share in non-promoter shareholdings. As per the shareholding data, FIIs held ownership in 4281 firms between 2001 and 2016 ( Table 2) . The sectoral composition of FII ownership of equity reveals a more significant share of FII holding in the financial sector than that of the non-financial and irrigation sectors (Fig. 3) . The stocks in the financial sector attract foreign investors because of higher returns when the market is bullish. The growing trend of FII ownership was steady until 2007-08 but began to plunge due to the recession in 2008. From 2009 to 2016, the FII ownership in India's equity has become stable. On the other hand, the average FII ownership in the irrigation sector is negligible (less than one percent). Foreign investors primarily invest in the manufacturing sector than other non-financial sector firms such as mining, electricity, services, and construction and real estate (Fig. 4) . Nonetheless, between 2003 and 2008, electricity firms are the primary recipients of the FII investment, and the construction and real sector dominated their portfolios between 2008 and 2010. The loss of returns on the financial sector as many stocks Percentage of FII ownership in total equity of the firm-the top ten firms The crashed during the period explains the change. Foreign investors also prefer financial service firms. The FII ownership in the banking sector comprises 85 percent of the total investment in the financial sector (Fig. 5 ). The foreign investors ownstocks of 4281 firms as non-promoters in India. However, the FII ownership of a majority of the firms was limited to a couple of years. Many firms do not hold FII ownership all the years. Thus, the sample is largely unbalanced due to missing information or FIIs not investing in stock for more than a year. Therefore, we selected all those firms in which foreign ownership is for a minimum of 9 years to avoid the weakly unbalanced data for the panel regression. 3 The selection of firms is based on the availability of the data and a chosen statistical design. The analysis of FII sample data suggests a diversity of data in terms of sectors, size, and percentage of ownership (Figs. 2, 3, 4, 5) . The descriptive statistics of the sample also suggest cross-sectional variability of the data (Tables 1 and 4 ). The purpose of current research is defeated if the value of the dependent variable is missing. Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy Private Limited (CMIE) Prowess and Bloomberg collate the balance sheets of the companies. The data on FII ownership of stocks is not available for all the years, and several values are missing. The reason for missing value-value missing due to technical error or FII does not own the stocks for a particular year is not available in the databases. The present case is more of a randomly missing values problem than the selection bias. Addressing the missing values by imputing a related time series or basing the entire estimation on bootstrapped samples with accept/reject criteria is not advisable to the current research question. Moreover, such exercises entail some assumptions and lead to severe bias. When the reason for non-response is ignorable, standard panel methods can be applied for consistent estimations. In the present case, the data on FII is missing due to non-response. Hence, we can estimate the standard panel regression. As illustrated by Verbeek and Nijman (1996) , our conditioning does not affect the distribution of interest, and the selection rule is ignorable. In such a case, the selection process is ignorable when making inferences without affecting the consistency or efficiency of the standard estimators (Verbeek and Nijman 1996) . The percentage distribution of the FII ownership in firms shows that the sample is not skewed, and descriptive statistics confirm the diversity (Tables 1 and 4 ). The alternative statistical designs are susceptible to biases. For instance, a probit model leads to misleading inferences in the absence of information on missing value (see Wooldridge 2010; Baltagi 2021). 4 Moreover, such an analysis is less meaningful in the absence of no information on whether the value is missing or FIIs do not own stocks for a particular year. Our sample selection method is consistent with Kang and Stulz's (1997) . However, sample selection bias may still be present in the sense of Renders et al. (2006) . Hence, the results of the present study need to be understood in light of such biases. The study covers the period from 2001 to 2016, and the final sample comprises 1078 firms. The availability of data dedicates the study period and choice of the sample. We obtained firm-level data from the CMIE Prowess database. We examine the firm-specific factors that determine the FII investment in a particular company. The examination of the issue necessitates time-series and crosssectional dimensions. Accordingly, panel data econometric modeling appropriately gives attention to these two dimensions of the data. The use of panel data provides the flexibility of econometric modeling and the ability to control for unobserved heterogeneity (Verbeek 2021) . The motivation for using panel data is to solve the omitted variables problem (Wooldridge 2010) . The panel regression mitigates omitted variable bias when information on variables correlated with both the regressors and regressand if these variables are constant in the time dimension or across entities (Baltagi 2021) . The panel data on firms can minimize estimation biases arising from aggregating groups into a single time series (Sul 2019) . Panel data contains more information, more variability, and more efficiency than pure time-series data or cross-sectional data (Hsiao 2014) . Panel data framework includes both cross-section and time series. Thus the number of observations is greater than cross-section and time-series alone. Firm-level FII determinants enjoy more significant heterogeneity as panel framework varies across a cross-section and over time. Such greater heterogeneity increases efficiency, lowers the collinearity among the explanatory variables, and increases the degrees of freedom and consistency (Wooldridge 2010) . The panel regression, therefore, is the most appropriate method to understand the firm-level determinants of the FII ownership of stocks. We estimate the following panel regression equation to examine firm-level determinants: In Eq. (1), the dependent variable FII it denotes the FII ownership of firm i at time t. The right-hand side variables are firm-specific factors selected based on their theoretical relevance and availability of data ( Table 3 ). The theoretical framework for the empirical analysis of firm-specific factors is based on home bias, asymmetric information, and agency problem models. 5 The firm-level factors help foreign investors to overcome the problem of asymmetric information. FII also benefits from the corporate governance of companies to factor the agency costs in investment decisions. a. Firm's size (Size): Modigliani-Miller (1958) theorem presumes a perfect capital market in which the internal and external capital are the perfect substitutes for the firms. The theorem imperatively argues that the larger the firm, the higher the investments. Smaller firms suffer from asymmetric information problems, which raises the cost of capital. The agency cost is also more for smaller firms (Devereux and Schiantarelli 1990; Kadapakkam et al. 1998) . Firm size, therefore, is expected to be positively related to FII ownership. b. Book-to-market ratio (BM): BM is the ratio of book value per share to an adjusted closing price of the firm. The theoretical relationship between BM and investment decision is ambiguous. A high BM indicates low earnings on the firm's assets, whereas a low BM suggests higher earnings (Fama and French 1992) . When investors prioritize the persistence in earnings, BM is inversely related to the FII ownership. However, a positive relationship is expected between BM and average returns when relative profitability is the source of a common risk factor in returns (Fama and French 1995a, b) . c. Market risk (Risk): Market risk of a particular stock or security (Firm's beta value) measures the volatility. Theoretically, systematic risk and investment decisions are positive and linearly related (Sharpe 1964; Lintner 1965) . These studies show that higher systematic risk suggests higher expected returns of stock and worthy of owning it. Solnik (1974) argued that risk is comparatively low in the internationally diversified portfolio than in domestic portfolios. d. Dividend yield (DV): DY is the financial ratio that measures the cash dividends paid to shareholders relative to the market value per share. The theoretical works of Miller and Modigliani (1961) imply the negative relationship between DY and returns. The high and low DY ratios signal a fall and rise in stock returns suggesting a negative association between DY and FII ownership. However, the dividend puzzle continued to be a conundrum (Brealey et al. 2017 ). (1) 5 For an excellent and concise review, see Khanna et al. (2005) . Amihud and Mendelson (1986) postulate a direct relationship between stock liquidity and a firm's value. As assets are discounted at the lower cost of capital, the liquidity of the firm improves. Brennan and Subrahmanyam (1996) and Easley and O'Hara (2004) support the liquidity premiums in stock returns. The liquidity ratio is thus expected to be directly related to the FII ownership. g. Leverage ratio (DE): The ratio of total debt to the firm's total equity indicates a firm's leverage. According to the pecking order theory, leverage adversely affects the firm's performance. A leverage firm risks the investment of shareholders who are residual claimants. Further, Batten and Vo (2015) assert a negative relationship between leverage and foreign ownership; foreign investors prefer to invest in low leverage firms. h. Foreign exposure (EXPS). The ratio of exports to total sales (EXPS) is an important measure of the firm's international exposure. Investors prefer stocks of those companies which they know better (Merton 1987a, b) . Global investors are expected to be more familiar with export-oriented firms than non-export firms (French and Poterba 1991) . Hence, foreign exposure to the firm is expected to attract FII inflows. i. Earnings per share (EPS): EPS is the ratio of net income minus dividends on preferred stock to an average of outstanding shares of a firm. EPS is an indicator of the financial health of the firm. We expect a positive relationship between EPS and FII ownership. Such a proposition relies on implied cost equity models (see Claus and Thomas 2001; Fama and French 2002) . j. Firm's performance (ROA): Return on assets (ROA) is the percentage of net income to total assets. ROA shows how efficiently a firm utilizes its resources to earn profits (see Galo 2016) . It overcomes the drawback of size and returns on equity indicators of a firm's performance. Investors, including foreign investors, prefer to invest in stocks with higher ROA. k. Firm visibility (FV): We measure a firm's visibility based on advertisement expenditure, news coverage, and product usage. The increased expenditure on advisement and news coverage leads to more publicity and visibility, attracting the FIIs. Merton's (1987a, b) model illustrates how investors prefer stocks they are aware of and familiar with. The home bias and information asymmetry are stylized facts of foreign investment, and news coverage and publicity familiarize these investors about the company in the sense of Merton (1987a, b) . We expect a positive relationship between a firm's visibility and FII ownership. This priori is consistent with the theory of asymmetric information. l. Foreign promoter ownership (FDI): FDI promoter ownership leads to greater integration in international capital markets and notable international exposure of a firm. Hence, FIIs prefer to invest in the firms where FDI investors have promoter ownership. Kaminsky et al. (2001) illustrate that the FII ownership is primarily driven by herd behavior and similarity. Edison and Warnock (2003) show that the FII investors follow peers and prefer the markets in which already direct investment is made primarily to overcome asymmetric information in emerging markets. The behavioral aspects such as herd behavior and group identity induce the FIIs to invest in those companies in which FDI ownership exists (Coval and Moskowitz 1999) . We employ a dummy variable to denote the presence of foreign promoter ownership. When a firm holds more than 25 percent of the FDI in total equity, the dummy takes the value of one and zero otherwise. We expect a higher level of FDI ownership in a firm induces FIIs to own its stock. m. Age (Age): This factor is crucial in investors' equity investment decisions, mainly when the market is characterized by asymmetric information. Theoretical literature, especially evolutionary economics, suggests that financial performance is positively related to the firm's age. The age of company influences performance through routinization, accumulated reputation, and organizational rigidity (Coad et al. 2018) . Hence, age is expected to influence FII ownership directly. The descriptive statistics in Table 4 show that the average value of FII ownership is 7.30 percent of the firm's total equity, while the maximum is 79.65 percent over the period; the FII ownership widely differs across the sample firms. FII ownership has high cross-sectional variability ranging from 0 to 79.65, with a median value of 3.29. Several explanatory variables have mean values that deviate from the medians. The skewness statistics suggest that all variables are positively skewed, whereas the book-to-market, return on asset, and age are negatively skewed. Kurtosis statistics show that all variables have peaks and are non-normally distributed. The Jarque-Bera test statistic further confirms the non-normal distribution of the data series (Table 4) . 6 We find all explanatory variables significantly correlated with FII ownership except the CR and FDI (Table 5 ). The low pairwise correlations among the explanatory variables suggest independence among these variables. Further, the variance inflator factor (VIF) statistics suggest no multicollinearity among the regressors. 7 The Fisher type augmented Dicky-Fuller (ADF), and the Phillips-Perron (PP) panel unit root statistics confirm the stationarity of the variables (Table 6 ). We estimate the fixed and random-effect models to understand the firm-level determinants of FII ownership. The intercept of the fixed-effect model is time-invariant but varies across the firms. However, the random-effect model considers both individual and time effects. The Hausman (1978) and Sargan (1958 )-Hansen (1982 test statistics suggest the relevance of the fixed-effect models for the firm-level analysis. The residuals are normally distributed. In Table 7 , we report the main results of the determinants of firm-specific factors. The size of the firm reflects the aggregate valuation of the firm. The coefficient of size is positive and statistically significant, indicating that large firms attract greater FII ownership. The result is in line with the theoretical proposition that foreign investors favor large firms over smaller firms because the former firms suffer less from asymmetric information than the latter (Merton 1987a, b; Huberman 2001) . Large size firms allow better diversification and efficiently use the resources. The economies of scale achieved by large firms result in higher sales (Gompers and Metrick 2001; Dahlquist and Robertsson 2001) . Besides, large size firms are internationally well recognized than that of small firms. Kang and Stulz's (1997) model illustrates the strong bias of foreign investors against smaller firms. Our findings on the size as the vital determinant corroborate the finding of Dahlquist and Robertsson (2001) , Lin and Shiu (2003) , and Batten and Vo (2015) . We use the book-to-market ratio (BM) to proxy the profitability and growth of the firm (Fama and French 1995a, b) . We find the positive and statistically significant influence of BM on FII ownership; the high value of the BM suggests the stock's undervaluation and, thus, potentially a growth stock. Such growth stocks attract investors. Liljeblom and Löflund (2005) and Batten and Vo (2015) also document similar results for Finnish and Vietnamese stock markets, respectively. Nevertheless, our results contradict the findings of Lin and Shiu (2003) , who argue that institutional investors hold ownership in firms with low BM (overvaluation) because of asymmetric information. According to these authors, low BM firms have high earnings than high BM firms, and therefore, foreign investors prefer to hold stocks of 6 We have transformed the data into a required form such as log, Z-core (standardization), and Box-Cox transformation as per the panel estimation prerequisite. 7 VIF results are not reported to save the space. Pairwise correlations (firm-specific factors) Variables as defined in Table 3 *Denotes the significance at 5% level Variable these firms. In India, foreign investors identify the undervalued stocks that offer better returns in the future. Thus, they push the price towards fundamental value in the market by incorporating the information. Further, we find an inverse relationship between risk and FII ownership. This result reflects how the high riskiness of the firms discourages foreign investors. This evidence contradicts some previous research and conventional theoretical models of Sharpe (1964) and Lintner (1965) but supports the view that foreign investors prefer large firms than the high-risk small firms despite expected higher returns. Our evidence on risk is consistent with the empirical works of Kang and Stulz (1997) and Liljeblom and Löflund (2005) . The inference also draws support from the finding on the size and FII relationship. In the case of dividend yield, we find a negative relationship indicating the preference of foreign investors for the low dividend paid stocks over the high dividend yield stocks. Such choice is due to the higher future growth of low dividend stocks and tax advantage accrued to these stocks. Moreover, the institutional investors are concerned about the holding ownership rather than the dividend of a particular stock. The evidence consists of theoretical predictions (Miller and Modigliani 1961; and Brealey et al. 2017) . Such a relationship is also documented for Swedish and Finnish markets (Dahlquist and Robertsson 2001; Liljeblom and Löflund 2005) . We find an inverse relationship between the closing price of the stock and FII ownership. This result suggests that FII investors choose stocks with low prices as they consider them as undervalued, which offer better returns in the future. In other Table 7 Firm-specific regression estimates (fixed-effect) Variables are as defined in Table 3 . The robust standard errors follow coefficient values in parenthesis. The dependent variable is FII ownership. The estimations are robust to heteroscedasticity and autocorrelation problem *, ** and *** indicate statistical significance at the 10%, 5% and 1% level, respectively Dependent Var.: FII ownership (1) (3) words, the foreign investment is a "smart investment," Thus, investors are required to identify those stocks that outperform stocks with higher expected returns forecasted by other investors (Gompers and Metrick 2001) . The coefficient of liquidity ratio (CR) is positive, suggesting that the foreign investors look for the firms' ability to meet the short-term obligation from the current assets. The result confirms the theoretical predictions (Amihud and Mendelson 1986) and recent evidence (Easley and O'Hara 2004) . This result shows that foreign investors demand highly liquid stocks and do not like to be exposed to highly leveraged firms with potential returns. For instance, the FII investors hold more stocks in the firms with a higher working capital stock. We find an inverse relationship between leverage (ratio of debt to equity) and foreign ownership of domestic stocks in India, and results are statistically significant in all the specifications. The increase in the debt to equity ratio of the firm implies that the firm is highly leveraged. Such performance would be uncertain, which in turn increases the idiosyncratic volatility (Black 1976) . The inverse relationship between leverage and FII validates the pecking order theory. Kang and Stulz (1997) and Batten and Vo (2015) report a negative relationship and suggest that foreign investors prefer to invest in low leverage firms. Further, we use earning per share (EPS) and return on assets (ROA) as a measure of the firm's performance, and our findings show that an increase in the firm's performance encourages more foreign investors to own such stocks. The coefficient of EPS is positive and significant as expected by the implied cost equity models of Claus and Thomas (2001) and Fama and French (2002) . The relationship is consistent with the mainstream theoretical prediction and the previous finding of Phung and Mishra (2016) on the Vietnamese stock market. In other words, FIIs are attracted to profitable firms. The coefficient of ROA is consistent with the argument that institutional investors invest in higher ROA firms as they utilize assets efficiently to squeeze profit (Model 2, Table 7 ). Nevertheless, the result is statistically insignificant and contrasts the evidence on the Vietnamese market (Phung and Mishra 2016) . To test the role of a firm's visibility (FV) in the decision of FII to invest in a stock, we use advertisement expenditure as a proxy to the visibility. The firm's visibility is measured based on advertisement expenditure, news coverage, and product usage. We hypothesize a positive relationship between FII ownership and the FV. The increasing expenditure on advertisement leads to more publicity and visibility and induce FII ownership. The coefficient of FV is positive and significant (Model 3 and 5, Table 7 ) and validate Merton's (1987a, b) model. The foreign promoter ownership (FDI) is another variable close to the visibility variable and argument of Merton (1987a, b) . We employ a dummy variable to represent the presence of FDI in a firm. If the firm holds the foreign promoter ownership in the form of FDI in total equity, we consider dummy as one and zero otherwise. We expect more FDI ownership to induce a significant share of FII in the firm's total equity. The results suggest a direct relationship between the FII ownership of domestic stocks and the presence of FDI as a promoter (Model 4-5, Table 7 ). Our evidence supports the argument of Edison and Warnock (2003) that the FII investors prefer to invest in those companies in which the peers have FDI ownership overcome the asymmetric information. The herd behavior (Kaminsky et al. 2001 ) and group identity (Coval and Moskowitz 1999) hypotheses also draws further support from the present empirical evidence. However, we find EXP-another variable that indicates perceptibility statistically insignificant to influence FII ownership. Age is a crucial factor in the equity investment decision of investors, especially in the presence of asymmetric information. The review of literature on age shows that financial performance is positively related to the firm's age (Coad et al. 2018) . Consistent with the theory, we find a direct relationship between age and foreign ownership of stocks indicating preference of the global investors to the older firms over the newer firms (Model 5, Table 7 ). Our evidence is consistent with the argument that foreign investors choose the stocks of the established companies to overcome asymmetric information in emerging markets, and they prefer stable returns (Kang and Stulz 1997) . This finding contrasts previous evidence of Patnaik and Shah (2008) . The preference for older firms indicates FII's buy-side bias (see Grosyberg et al. 2013) . We carry out a sub-sample analysis to check the robustness and general applicability of the results. We estimate Eq. (1) for pre and post-GFC periods, and results are presented in Tables 8 and 9 of Appendix A. We find results consistent with the baseline results (Table 7 ) and conform to our inferences. We do not find a significant impact of the GFC on the relationship between FII ownership and firm-specific variables. Nonetheless, the coefficient values for post-GFC period are lower than those of the pre-GFC period, but the statistical difference between coefficients is not significant. Jensen and Meckling (1976) and Shleifer and Vishny (1986) postulate a theoretical relationship between ownership structure and firm performance. The empirical evidence on foreign ownership and performance of the firms is mixed. However, such documented evidence is plausible when the ownership is large and long-term (Douma et al. 2006) . The buying and selling by FIIs who are portfolio investors hardly influence firm-specific factors (Chhibber and Majumdar 1999; Gedajlovic et al. 2005) . Due to restrictions, FIIs in India hold a fragmented stake in the firms (Tables 1 and 4 ). With such a lower proportion and dispersed ownership, FIIs play a reluctant role in monitoring and are thus less likely to influence the firms (Khanna and Palepu 2000; Shrivastav and Kalsie 2017) . Hence, the results of this study are not affected by endogeneity and causality. Nonetheless, in some instances, FII ownership itself may affect the firms' visibility with the presumption that the presence of FIIs leads to an increase in the firm's recognition, which positively influences the performance. We examine this possibility by estimating a panel vector autoregression (VAR) model. Moreover, panel VAR has the merit of allowing the cross-sectional dimension, which also controls for heterogeneity across the subjects and reinforces the robustness of the estimation. Panel VAR models are selected based on stability and information criteria. The information criteria such as modified Bayesian information criteria (MBIC), modified Akaike information criteria (MAIC), and modified Hannan-Quinn information criteria (HQIC) suggest lag of one (Table 10 of Appendix B). Eigenvalues confirm the stability of the panel VAR model (Table 11 and Fig. 6 of Appendix B). In a panel VAR, all variables are treated as endogenous, and explanatory variables assume lagged value to capture causality. The generalized moment estimation (GMM) method is used to estimate the panel VAR model. The estimators are consistent and asymptotically efficient. We impose Cholesky's orthogonal decomposition to estimate impulse-response functions (Figs. 7 and 8 of Appendix B). 8 The panel VAR estimates confirm the inference drawn from the panel regression estimates of firm-specific determinants of the FII ownership of stocks in India. In other words, FII ownership is sensitive to a unit shock in firm-level variables (Fig. 7 of Appendix B) . On the other hand, we find that firm's visibility and returns on assets are the only variables sensitive to the shock in FII ownership. The result suggests that while the firm's visibility attracts global investors, investment by the FIIs in a firm itself boosts the firm's visibility. 9 The significant impact of the FII ownership on return on asset indicates that the firms utilize the assets better with the increased presence of global investors. Our evidence on the return on asset and foreign ownership is consistent with the view of Khanna and Palepu (2000) that the increased presence of global investors brings monitoring benefits, which leads to better utilization of assets. Overall, the empirical analysis shows that FII ownership primarily belongs to the theory of the firm and equity research. The growing body of literature on corporate governance shows the increasing influence of corporate governance on investment decisions (Gompers and Metrick 2001; Mohanty 2003; Gibson 2003; Morey et al. 2009; Mukherjee 2015) . Bhagat and Black (1999) find an uncertain relationship between governance and performance of the firms. Brown and Caylor (2006) show the relevance of a few governance indicators to the firm's valuation. Similarly, Renders et al. (2010) empirically find decreasing marginal effect of governance on the valuation of European firms. The best corporate governance mechanism protects the wealth of minority shareholders from agency problems (La Porta et al. 1999; Bokpin and Isshaq 2009 and Klapper and Love 2004) . Hence, corporate governance indicators (CGIs) are expected to directly relate to the FII ownership because of their positive influence on performance of firms. Mangena and Tauringana (2007) show a positive association between disclosure, independent non-executive directors and audit committee, and foreign ownership of the stocks. However, Panicker et al. (2016) find no such relationship except the board's size in the IT industry. In this light, we probe the influence of CGIs on the investment decision of FII to own stocks of Indian companies. The research on corporate governance is scarce, especially with panel framework, due to a lack of quality data on indicators (Börsch-Supan and Köke 2003; Sjöstrand 2016) . The problem is more severe in emerging markets such as India. The data on several CGIs is not available at a firm-level for a meaningful estimation. We choose CGIs, such as board size (BS), independent directors (ID), and non-executive directors (Non-exe) for the analysis dedicated by the availability of data. We estimate panel regression between FII ownership and these corporate governance variables (Model 1, Table 8 ). To ensure robustness, we also estimate a baseline regression (Eq. 1) with governance variables (Model 2, Table 8 ). 10 The theoretical relationship between board size and foreign ownership of stocks is direct. The larger boards indicate the independence of the board (Muth and Donaldson 1998) . CEOs need to build a consensus on a large size board and cannot dominate it. Some studies also report a negative relationship (Yermack 1996; Fich and Shivdasani 2005) owing to free rider and monitoring issues. Independent directors and non-executive directors reduce the likelihood of fraud and misuse of power (Dechow et al. 1996; Hillman and Dalziel 2003; Raheja 2005) . The foreign investors perceive these directors as competent in monitoring the firm and ensuring the protection of investors. The non-executive directors are also expected to reduce agency Table 3 . This table presents the panel fixed effect regression results of CGI indicators. In model 1, we include CGI variables, whereas, in model 2, these variables are added to the regressors (financial variables) of the baseline model of Table 6 . We further estimate these models with the GFC dummy in model 3 and model 4, respectively. The corporate governance indicators (BS, ID, and Non-Exe) are collected from Bloomberg. For the 1078 total sample firms, the CGI data was available for 343 firms from 2006 to 2016 costs and improve the monitoring and accountability of the boards (Zattoni et al. 2009 ). The empirical evidence on the issue is mixed. The proxies of corporate governance are negatively skewed and non-normally distrusted (Table 4 ). These CGIs are not correlated with financial performance proxies and follow the stationary process (Tables 5 and 6 ). We find coefficients of ID & Non-Exe positive and statistically significant. The result implies that foreign investors choose to invest in stocks of those companies with more independent directors and non-executive numbers. These results are consistent with previous works such as Mangena and Tauringana (2007) and Desender et al. (2013) but contradict Panicker et al. (2016) . The empirical evidence is consistent with the theoretical works, which illustrate that the composition and independence of the board lead to effective monitoring and accountability and eventually ensure the protection of the investors, especially the minority shareholders (Fama and Jensen 1983; Yermack 1996; Dechow et al. 1996; Fich and Shivdasani 2005; Raheja 2005; Zattoni et al. 2009 ). Our estimates indicate a negative relationship between board size and FII ownership, but the coefficient is statistically insignificant. The negative sign of the coefficient is consistent with some of the theoretical predictions that coordination, communication, and cohesiveness problems arise in large boards (Jensen 1993; Lipton and Lorsch 1992) . The increase in board size also leads to a free-rider problem and lower corporate performance (Lipton and Lorsch 1992) . Our finding on board size is consistent with Mangena and Tauringana's (2007) study but contrasts evidence of Panicker et al. (2016) for IT firms. To further check the robustness, we examine the impact of CGIs on FII ownership by re-estimating models 1 and 2 of Table 8 with the GFC dummy and present the estimates (Model 3 and 4) in the same table. 11 We do not find a significant difference between these estimates and full sample analysis. The estimates thus presented in Table 8 with various specifications show that the overall inference drawn on the relationship between CGIs and FII ownership is not sensitive to any chosen sample or events. We investigate the determinants of foreign ownership of domestic stocks in the fastest-growing emerging markets such as India. The present research employs firmlevel data to investigate the significant determinants of foreign ownership in Indian stocks. We find firm-specific factors such as size, the book to market ratio, the volatility of the stock, stock price, dividend yield, liquidity, leverage, and earnings as primary determinants of foreign ownership. 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The earlier versions of the paper were presented at 6th IIFT Conference on Empirical Issues in International Trade and Finance, New Delhi and International Conference on New Directions in Economic Theory and Empirical Economics, IIM Calcutta. The corresponding author thanks the SRIC IIT Kharagpur for the grants to carry out this project. Any errors are our own.Funding The research is funded by Sponsored Research and Industrial Consultancy (SRIC), Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur, Kharagpur, India. call for reforms in corporate governance and a further improvement in companies' financial fundamentals to attract the FII. The online version contains supplementary material available at https:// doi. org/ 10. 1007/ s40953-021-00233-3.