Effect Of Voluntary Disclosure On Cost Of Equity Capital Of Companies Quoted At Nairobi Securities Exchange In Kenya
Abstract
Over the years there has been an increased trend towards application of corporate governance
practice all over the world following major corporate scandals. The role of corporate
disclosure practice has been of growing interest prompting for re-examination and scrutiny of
policy on voluntary information disclosure. The objective of this is to determine the effect of
voluntary disclosure on the Cost of Equity Capital of companies quoted at the Nairobi
Securities Exchange. To achieve this, the study sought to examine the effect of forwardlooking information, Corporate Social Responsibility information and Corporate Strategic
information on the Cost of Equity Capital. The study was based on agency theory, capital
need theory, signaling theory and stakeholder’s theory. Descriptive research design was
applied to attain the objectives of the study. The target population was companies currently
listed in Nairobi Securities Exchange, however purposive sampling was used to select 20
companies from the NSE 20 share index.NSE is subdivided into 11 different sectors.
Secondary data applied in the study was extracted from NSE handbooks, Capital Market
Authority, annual reports and accounts of firms listed at NSE from a period of 5 years from
2012 to 2016. Data was analyzed using STATA. Results of the study indicated a positively
insignificant relationship between voluntary disclosure of forward-looking, corporate social
responsibility and strategic disclosure on the cost of equity capital. Additionally voluntary
disclosure explained 9.28% on the variation in the cost of equity capital.