Corporate Social Responsibility as a Strategic Instrument to Reduce Investor Sentiment
Abstract
Firm performance can be a signal for investors to determine firm value. This study examines whether earnings
management and disclosure of corporate social responsibility are hedges to protect firm value when performance
declines. The hedging mechanism is used as a new analytical approach. Exogenous variables tested are financial
performance, financial risk, and dividend policy on firm value. The population was manufacturing companies listed on
the Indonesia Stock Exchange in 2014 – 2019. Five hundred and sixteen-year observations were tested to confirm
the hedging hypothesis. The analysis method uses path analysis with a variance-based structural equation model.
The statistical findings support to acceptance of the three hypotheses. Earnings management and disclosure of
corporate social responsibility are tools that successfully cover the decline in firm performance. Earnings management
or CSR is a hedging instrument for management when the company performance declines. When performance
reduces, its existence eliminates the effect of decreasing firm value. Contrary to predictions, neither variable could
offset the increasing pressure on financial risk and dividend policy. Corporate social responsibility disclosure is more
effective as a hedging mechanism than earnings management because it directly affects firm value. The results
contribute to recognizing the possibility that social responsibility is a matter of signal and opportunistic action.
Management seeks to protect the company from declining company performance and other antecedents.
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