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This study investigates the causal impact of stock price crash risk on the cost of equity (COE) in China’s segmented A- and B-share markets with an emphasis on ownership structures and market regimes. Employing a bootstrap panel Granger causality framework, Markov-switching dynamic regression, and panel threshold regression models, the analysis reveals that heightened crash risk significantly increases COE, with the effects being more pronounced for A-shares because of domestic investors’ heightened risk sensitivity. This relationship further intensifies in bull markets, where investor optimism amplifies downside risk perceptions. Ownership segmentation plays a critical role, as foreign investors in B-shares exhibit weaker reliance on firm-level valuation metrics, favoring broader risk-diversification strategies. These findings offer actionable insights into corporate risk management, investor decision making, and policy formulation in segmented and emerging equity markets.
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; Wang, Xianzhi 2 ; Chen, Chuang 3 ; Bouraima, Mouhamed Bayane 4
1 School of Economics and Management, Southwest Jiaotong University, Chengdu 610031, China
2 Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong SAR 999077, China; [email protected]
3 School of Business, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia; [email protected]
4 Sichuan College of Architectural Technology, Deyang 618000, China; [email protected]