This study examines how corporate governance structures influence the financial performance of listed Nigerian consumer‐goods firms, with financial technology (FinTech) investment as a mediating factor. Drawing on data from ten firms over eleven years (2014–2024), governance is measured by board size, board independence, and board gender diversity; FinTech investment is proxy by R and financial performance by Return on Equity (ROE). Using panel regression and interaction‐term analysis, results indicate that board size has a positive, significant direct effect on ROE, whereas board independence exhibits a negative direct effect. Board gender diversity positively correlates with ROE but is not independently significant. FinTech investment exerts a significant negative direct impact on ROE, reflecting short‐term R truly independent directors become critical only when overseeing substantial FinTech initiatives; and gender diversity’s positive effect requires targeted digital expertise. The study contributes to governance literature by illustrating the conditional (mediated) role of FinTech in translating board attributes into sustainable profitability.
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Adeniyi Olubunmi Fadipe
Yaba College of Technology
Adebusola Oyegoke
Sunday Ojediran
Yaba College of Technology
Yaba College of Technology
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Fadipe et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68af570dad7bf08b1eaddd17 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.70382/bejmse.v8i7.035