Incentives vs. control
Incentives vs. control
Rate this book:
About This Book
"Dual-class common stock allows for the separation of voting rights and cash flow rights across the different classes of equity. We construct a large sample of dual-class firms in the United States and analyze the relationships of insider's cash flow rights and voting rights with firm value, performance, and investment behavior. We find that relationship of firm value to cash flow rights is positive and concave and the relationship to voting rights is negative and convex. Identical quadratic relationships are found for the respective ownership variables with sales growth, capital expenditures, and the combination of R&D and advertising. Our evidence is consistent with an entrenchment effect of voting control that leads managers to underinvest and an incentive effect of cash flow ownership that induces managers to pursue more aggressive strategies"--National Bureau of Economic Research web site.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Paul A. Gompers
[Governance index ("G")]
[Governance index ("G")]
Advanced Introduction to Priva
Advanced Introduction to Private Equity
Bridge building in venture cap
Bridge building in venture capital-backed acquisitions
Buy local?
Buy local?
Conflict of interest in the is
Conflict of interest in the issuance of public securities
Entrepreneurial spawning
Entrepreneurial spawning