The Korean Journal of Financial Management (재무관리연구)
- Volume 11 Issue 1
- /
- Pages.263-284
- /
- 1994
- /
- 1225-0759(pISSN)
The Monitoring Effects of Institutions, Outside Directors, and Outside Blockholders on Manager's Decision: The Case of Antitakeover Measures Adoption
경영자의 의사결정에 있어서 기관투자가, 비상임이사, 외부 대주주의 감시효과: 반인수조치 채택사례분석
- Choo, Hyun-Tai (Department of Finance College of Business Administration The University of Iowa Iowa City)
- Published : 1994.06.30
Abstract
This study examines the monitoring effects of institutions, outside directors, and outside blockholders by seeing managers' selection of antitakeover measures. In this paper, we hypothesize that managers use antitakeover techniques to entrench themselves when they are not monitored closely. Consequently, we hypothesize that institutional ownership, outside membership on board of directors, outside directors ownership, and outside blockholder ownership are less in firms which adopt harmful antitakeover measures. This paper analyzes whether the degree of monitoring by institutions, outside directors, and outside blockholders influences managers' adoption of different types of takeover defenses. We find interesting empirical results. First, aggregate institutional ownership is positively correlated with the likelihood of antitakeover techniques adoption. This result implies that institutional investors are passive. Second, total and active blockholder owner-ship is higher at firms that do not propose any defensive tactics. passive blockholder owner-ship is highest at fair price firms but low at poison pills firms. Ownership concentration by outside investors increases monitoring and reduces agency problems. Thirid, outside board monitoring is ineffective.
Keywords