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Table: Empirical
studies on ownership structure and performance[1]
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z |
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Author(s) &Journal |
Sample
& Period[2]
|
Ownership
|
Performance
variable(s) |
Other
variable(s): Controls & dependents[5] |
Statistical
methods |
Main
results |
Preferred
explanation |
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18,301 insider trades on Oslo Stock Exchange for 247 securities at
197 firms. 1985-92. |
Insiders are top-officers and directors, the firm's auditor and investment
advisor, and close family members of these. |
1) AMAR1, average monthly abnormal return using equal weighted CAPM.
2) AMAR2, using conditional multifactor model with value weights. 3) AMAR3,
using conditional multifactor model with ownership weights. |
AMAR2 and 3 adjusts abnormal returns for: 1) Return spread between
Norwegian interbank rate and change in world stock index. 2) Real Norwegian
interbank rate. 3) Interest spread between interbank rate and ten-year government
bonds. 4) [1)] lagged one period. 5) World stock dividend less Norwegian interbank
rate, lagged one period. 6) [2] lagged one period. 7) Dummy for month of
January. |
Event / portfolio-study. Compare various measures of AMAR on various
definitions of insider portfolios. |
AMAR1 produce conflicting evidence on insider earnings. AMAR2 and 3
does not produce any significant evidence on insider trading. No systematic
evidence on insider profits could be found on insider portfolios sorted
after: 1) Size of trades. 2) % size of insider ownership. 3) Value of insider
ownership. Finally, insider portfolios are found unable to outperform mutual
funds. |
The insider-investment argument coupled with an entrenchment argument. |
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Elliot [1972], Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis |
88 firms of 840 firms from S&P's Compustat Data. 1964-67. |
MC £5% single block of voting control. OC ³10% and evidence
of active control, or, ³20%. |
1) Change in sales. 2) Change in assets. 3) Dividends. 4) Return on
stocks. 5) Profits. 6) Return on equity. 7) Growth in spending. |
No control variables but other variables include: 1) Stock of liquid
assets. 2) Cash flow. 3) Debt/Equity. 4) Non-equity financed assets. 5)
Discretionary income. 6) Capital expenditure/ Net plant assets. 7) Size by
sales. 8) Growth in sales. |
Variance analysis. |
No significant effects between OC and MC except with regard to change
in cash flow. |
The incentive argument. |
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Find that managers make abnormal returns when trading in their firm's
stock. |
The insider-investment argument. |
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984 NYSE firms. 1979-83. |
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None. |
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Support for a substitution hypothesis between debt, managerial
ownership and external ownership. Debt ratio decreases significantly for
higher managerial ownership and it increases significantly for more concentrated
external ownership. |
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Find that insiders make abnormal return on their trading but that
this return does not appear to be related to news other than information
about insider trading. |
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26 recapitalizations. 1984-88. |
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Event study. |
Find that the abnormal returns of a leveraged recapitalization increases
marginally (10% level) with changes in managerial ownership and increases
significantly with the level of distributable cash flow. |
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- Copyright 1997-2008, ViamInvest. Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. Legal notice. |
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[1] Some of the studies have
investigated other issues as well, such as, the relation between ownership
structure and the risk of the firm’s performance.
[2] The reported period typically refers to the maximum
period that a particular study applies. Often the performance variables are
collected over the entire period, whereas the ownership variables and control
variables are collected at one year in the investigated period. All studies use
publicly traded firms (unless otherwise described), because they are easier to
get information about.
[3] Abbreviations: Management
control (MC); Ownership control (OC); Owner managed (OM); External control
(EC); Strong owner control (SOC); Weak owner control (WOC); All owner control
(AOC); Financial control (FC); Majority held (MH); Diffusely held (DH).
[4] The ownership variable is typically measured
as concentration of ownership on a particular set of owners, e.g. ownership by
managers or institutional investors.
[5] This colon includes 1) independent control
variables, 2) dependent variables that are not performance or ownership
variables, and 3) variables used for sample classification.