Adoption of Identity Theft Countermeasures and its Short- and Long-Term Impact on Firm Value

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43.1.14
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Abstract
Identity theft has impaired e-commerce. To combat the crime, many identity theft countermeasures (ITC) have been proposed. As investments in ITC are substantial and the benefits of such investments are intangible, companies are often hesitant to adopt such measures. This was the motivation for this study of the impact of 526 ITC adoption announcements on short- and long-term market value. The event study shows that such announcements result in positive market return of about U.S. $583 million around the date of announcement. Calendar-time portfolio analysis (CPA) is used for the long-term impact analysis and shows that the adoption of ITC generates positive and significant average monthly return up to 1.5% with control of market risk factors in a year. Subsampling analysis and interaction analysis show that U.S. listing, early ITC adoption, and two- factor authentication may moderate the market value of ITC adopters differently. A number of robustness checks (e.g., Heckman model, cross-sectional regression on Tobin’s Q, firm-specific risk factor analysis, subsampling analysis by ICT development, and analysis of security statements in annual reports) are performed. The research provides quantitative evidence of financial gain resulting from adoption of ITC and aspires to raise ITC awareness among industrial practitioners.
Additional Details
Author Indranil Bose and Alvin Chung Man Leung
Year 2013
Volume 43
Issue 1
Keywords Calendar-time portfolio analysis, event study, firm value, identity theft, identity theft countermeasures, long-term impact, short-term impact, stock prices
Page Numbers 313-327; DOI: 10.25300/MISQ/2019/14192
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