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Firm Performance and Mechanisms to Control Agency Problems between Managers and Shareholders

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TLDR
The authors examined the use of seven mechanisms to control agency problems between managers and shareholders, including shareholdings of insiders, institutions, and large blockholders, use of outside directors, debt policy, managerial labor market, and market for corporate control.
Abstract
This paper examines the use of seven mechanisms to control agency problems between managers and shareholders. These mechanisms are: shareholdings of insiders, institutions, and large blockholders; use of outside directors; debt policy; the managerial labor market; and the market for corporate control. We present direct empirical evidence of interdependence among these mechanisms in a large sample of firms. This finding suggests that crosssectional OLS regressions of firm performance on single mechanisms may be misleading. Indeed, we find relationships between firm performance and four of the mechanisms when each is included in a separate OLS regression. These are insider shareholdings, outside directors, debt, and corporate control activity. Importantly, the effect of insider shareholdings disappears when all of the mechanisms are included in a single OLS regression, and the effects of debt and corporate control activity also disappear when estimations are made in a simultaneous systems framework. Together, these findings are consistent with optimal use of each control mechanism except outside directors.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Management Ownership and Market Valuation: An Empirical Analysis

TL;DR: This article investigated the relationship between management ownership and market valuation of the firm, as measured by Tobin's Q. In a 1980 cross-section of 371 Fortune 500 firms, they found evidence of a significant nonmonotonic relationship.
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The Structure of Corporate Ownership: Causes and Consequences

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that the structure of corporate ownership varies systematically in ways that are consistent with value maximization, and they find no significant relationship between ownership concentration and accounting profit rates for a set of firms.
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The Determinants of Capital Structure Choice

TL;DR: In this paper, the explanatory power of some of the recent theories of optimal capital structure is analyzed empirically and a factor-analytic technique is used to mitigate the measurement problems encountered when working with proxy variables.
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Additional evidence on equity ownership and corporate value

TL;DR: The authors investigated the relation between Tobin's Q and the structure of equity ownership for a sample of 1,173 firms for 1976 and 1,093 firms for 1986 and found a significant curvilinear relation between Q and common stock owned by corporate insiders.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the existence of an optimal capital structure: theory and evidence

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that if there are significant "leverage-related" costs, such as bankruptcy costs, agency costs of debt, and loss of non-debt tax shields, then the marginal bondholder's tax rate will be less than the corporate rate and there will be a positive net tax advantage to corporate debt financing.
Related Papers (5)
Trending Questions (1)
Do controlling shareholder firms engage in strategic decision-making?

Controlling shareholder firms engage in strategic decision-making through mechanisms like insider shareholdings, outside directors, debt policy, and corporate control activities, as per the paper's findings.