Cash holdings, corporate governance, and acquirer returns Seoungpil Ahn and Jaiho Chung May 11, 2012.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 3 Market Efficiency
Advertisements

Mutual Fund Performance and Governance Structure: The Role of Portfolio Managers and Boards of Directors Bill Ding Russ Wermers Discussion by Mathijs van.
Transparency and the Pricing of Market Timing Xin Chang Nanyang Technological University Zhihong Chen City University of Hong Kong Gilles Hilary INSEAD.
School District Consolidation William Duncombe and John Yinger The Maxwell School, Syracuse University February 2013.
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CORPORATE GOVERNANCE AND THE STOCK PRICE OF LISTED COMPANIES IN MAI USING FELTHEM – OHLSON VALUATION MODEL Supranee Sugaraserani.
CEO hedging opportunities and the weighting of performance measures in compensation Shengmin Hung Hunghua Pan* Taychang Wang 12/06/
A test of the free cash flow hypothesis: The case of bidder returns Larry H.P. Lang Rene M. Stulz Ralph A. Walkling (Journal of Financial Economics 29,
Extraordinary Acquirers
Acquiring the Acquirer: The Role of Target’s Acquisition Experience in M&A Indrajeet Mohite (ICMA Centre, Henley Business School, University of Reading)
Two theories: Government ownership of banks (GOB) should be more prevalent in poorer countries, with less developed financial markets, with less well-
1 Activism and the Shift to Annual Director Elections Discussant: I-Ju Chen ( 陳一如 ), Yuan-Ze University, Taiwan 2012 National Taiwan University International.
Corporate Finance -M&A
Chapter Interactions Between Investment and Financing Decisions u Separation Principle u Investment decisions and financing decisions are independent.
Comments on Cremers & Ferrell Bernard Black Northwestern University Law School and Kellogg School of Mgmt.
Determinants and Dynamics of Dividend Payouts by REITs by Milena Petrova, Syracuse University Andrew Spieler, Hofstra University.
Evidence from REITS Brent W. Ambrose (The Pennsylvania State University), Shaun Bond (University of Cincinnati), & Joseph Ooi (National University of Singapore)
Shared Auditors in Mergers and Acquisitions Lubomir Litov University of Arizona & Wharton Financial Institutions Centre, Univ. of Pennsylvania.
Operating Performance and Free Cash Flow of Asset Buyers Steven Freund Alexandros P. Prezas Gopala K. Vasudevan (Financial Management 32, 2003, )
1 Corporate Governance & Firm Performance Sanjai Bhagat and Brian Bolton
Market Efficiency Chapter 10.
11-1© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. Corporate Governance Chapter Eleven.
Sarbanes-Oxley, Governance and Performance Sarbanes-Oxley, Governance and Performance Sanjai Bhagat University of Colorado, Boulder Brian Bolton University.
Jim Hsieh (George Mason) Dolly King (UNC Charlotte) NTU, 12/10/2010.
Board Independence and Long-Term Performance Sanjai Bhagat University of Colorado, Boulder & Bernard Black Stanford Law School Also, please see the articles.
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. Chapter 10 Capital Markets and the Pricing of Risk.
Board Independence and Long-Term Performance Sanjai Bhagat University of Colorado, Boulder & Bernard Black Stanford Law School Also, please see the articles.
Finance and Accounts 2 Analysing Accounts.
1 Investor Protection and the Information Content of Annual Earnings Announcements: International Evidence Mark L. DeFond Mingyi Hung Robert Trezevant.
1 Corporate Governance Indices Sanjai Bhagat and Brian Bolton
Efficient Capital Markets Two Views on Capital Market Efficiency: “... in price movements... the sum of every scrap of knowledge available to Wall Street.
CORPORATE GOVERNANCE IN JAMAICA: A RISK MANAGEMENT APPROACH Dr. Twila Mae Logan Dr. Doreen Gooden Florida International University.
OWNERSHIP STRUCTURE AND INFORMATION DISCLOSURE: AN APPROACH AT FIRM LEVEL IN VIETNAM Quach M. Hung and Pham T. B. Ngoc University of Economics HCMC Hoa.
Does Cross-Listing Mitigate Insider Trading? Adriana Korczak and Meziane Lasfer Cass Business School, London.
Pay for Performance? CEO Compensation and Acquirer Returns in BHCs Kristina Minnick, Bentley College Haluk Unal, University of Maryland and FDIC CFR Liu.
Corporate Governance Indices Roberta Romano Yale Law School, NBER and ECGI International Conference on Institutional Quality Madrid, Jan. 22, 2009.
1 Ex-ante (incentive) effects of takeovers. Positives In theory: raise managerial discipline, incentives to exert effort and treat shareholders well In.
Information Trading: Public Information – Other than Earnings Aswath Damodaran.
Efficient Market Hypothesis EMH Presented by Inderpal Singh.
Jim Hsieh (George Mason) Qinghai Wang (Georgia Tech) NTU, 12/11/2008.
Product Characteristics, Competition and Dividends by Hoberg, Phillips, and Prabhala University of Maryland Discussion by Gustavo Grullon Rice University.
COMM W. Suo Slide 1. COMM W. Suo Slide 2  Random Walk - stock price change unpredictably  Actually stock prices follow a positive trend.
2012 National Taiwan University International Conference on Finance, 2012/12/07 I-Ju Chen ( 陳一如 ), Yuan-Ze University, Taiwan Will Deregulation Affect.
EMH- 0 Efficient Market Hypothesis Eugene Fama, 1964 A market where there are huge number of rational, profit-maximizers actively competing, with each.
1 Mutual Fund Performance and Manager Style. J.L. Davis, FAJ, Jan/Feb 01, Various studies examined the evidence of persistence in mutual fund performance.
Discussion of Golden Parachutes and the Wealth of Shareholders Authors Lucian Bebchuk, Alma Cohen, and Charles C.Y. Wang Yale-ECGI-Oxford Conference November.
Market Efficiency. What is an efficient market? A market is efficient when it uses all available information to price assets.  Information is quickly.
Wei-Ling Song E.J. Ourso College of Business Louisiana State University 1 Do Higher Paid CEOs Weather the Storm Better? Evidence from the Great Recession.
EFFICIENT MARKET HYPOTHESIS
0 How corporate governance affects dividend policy under both agency problems and external financing constraints? Joon Chae, Sungmin Kim and Eunjung Lee.
Children’s Emotional and Behavioral Problems and Their Parents’ Labor Supply Patrick Richard, Ph.D., M.A. Nicholas C. Petris Center on Health Markets and.
Corporatization of Family Companies & International Corporate Governance Principles Syrian Commission on Financial Markets & Securities 3 rd Conference.
The Influence of Corporate Internal Governance on the Wealth Effect of R&D Expenditure Increases Shao-Chi Chang National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan.
Corporate Scandals and Household Stock Market Participation Mariassunta Giannetti, Stockholm School of Economics, CEPR Tracy Yue Wang, University of Minnesota.
1 Mutual Fund Performance and Manager Style. J.L. Davis, FAJ, Jan/Feb 01 Various studies examined the evidence of persistence in mutual fund performance.
Corporate governance practices and capital structure
Do Institutions Influence Corporate Behavior
Do Higher Paid CEOs Weather the Storm Better
Are All Inside Directors the Same
Discussion by Ron Masulis Vanderbilt University
Anchoring & Acquisitions
Joseph B Nichols 2008 NASM of the Econometric Society June 21, 2008
Share repurchases and firm performance: new evidence on the agency costs of free cash flow Nohel and Tarhan (1998, JFE)
Corporate governance and the stock liquidity in Australia
Acquirer-target social ties and merger outcomes
MICHAEL NEEL, University of Houston
Discussion Demian Berchtold July 6, 2018.
Audra L. Boone, Erik Lie, Yixin Liu
The acquisitiveness of youth: CEO age and acquisition behavior
The Effect of Institution Ownership on Payout Policy
Board Structure, Antitakeover Provisions, and Stockholder Wealth
Presentation transcript:

Cash holdings, corporate governance, and acquirer returns Seoungpil Ahn and Jaiho Chung May 11, 2012

Intuition  Is competition good?  Milton Friedman( ) would say yes and always yes  Average parents in Korea would say NO for their kids  Are the restrictions on shareholders’ rights bad?  Yes, if entrench managers  No, if talkative(?) shareholders impair timely decision makings  Conditional on the current level of the restrictions and firm characteristics  We examine this conditional effect of governance provisions

Governance Provisions and Firm Performance  A milestone work by Gompers, Ishii, and Metrick (GIM, 2003)  Governance Index based trading strategy yields abnormal returns during the 1990s.  Short poorly governed firms (many anti-takeover provisions, ATPs)  Long well governed firms (few ATPs)  produced AR of 8.5% annually  The abnormal return disappears in the later period after 2001 [Bebchuk, Cohen, Wang, 2012; Core, Guay, and Rusticus, 2006]

Does causality run from ATPs to firm performance?  Spurious correlation  ATPs may reflect risk that is not captured by expected return models [GIM, 2003; Core, Guay, and Rusticus, 2006]  Endogeneity issues [Masulis et al., 2007; Danielson and Karpoff (1998) among others]  Look-ahead adoption of ATPs before the impending events  The influence of omitted factors [Core, Guay, and Rusticus, 2006]  Poor past performance or other unobservable factors covary with ATPs  Causal relation  Market participants learn the performance difference between well governed firms and poorly governed firms [Bebchuk, Cohen, and Wang, 2012; Cremers and Nair, 2005]

Attention to corporate governance  Attention to governance from the media, institutional investors, and academic researchers has exploded since early [Netter, Poulsen, and Stegemoller, 2009; Bebchuk, Cohen, and Wang, 2012]

Structural break of market learning  Market participants become aware of the importance of corporate governance by the end of 2001 [Bebchuk, Cohen, and Wang, 2012]  Learning hypothesis  Anomaly in the pre-SOX period: ATPs indeed reduce firm value  Market learning eliminates AR in the period (Post-SOX period)

A Caveat  When market participants are aware of the detrimental impact of ATPs, how do ATPs survive under shareholders’ activism and the pressure from institutional investors and policy makers?  G-Index includes 24 provisions  BCF Index includes 6 most entrenching provisions Pre-SOX ( ) Post-SOX ( ) F[χ2]F[χ2] G-Index 9.29 [9.00] 9.29 [9.00] 0.00 [0.26] BCF 2.12 [2.00] 2.40 [2.00] *** [40.72] ***

Our study  We re-examine bidder returns  Weak shareholder protection:  Lower bidder announcement returns in [Masulis et al., 2007]  Focusing on the influence of omitted factors:  If the market learning does not lead to the abolishment of ATPs, what are the exact channels through which the effect of ATPs disappear in the post-SOX period?  The role of excess cash holdings  The influence of external governance (EG)  Public pension fund holdings (ownership by 19 largest pension funds)  Industry competition (industry Net Profit Margin)

The interaction among governance indices, excess cash, and external governance mechanisms  Excess cash holdings for poorly governed firms:  Lower value of cash holdings  Dissipate cash quickly in capital expenditures [Dittmar and Mahrt-Smith, 2007; Harford, Mansi, and Maxwell, 2008]  For the relation between ATPs and bidder returns:  No main effect [Masulis et al., 2007]  Interaction effect?  We examine the impact of ATPs on bidder returns when ATPs and excess cash interact

 The strength of external governance mechanisms:  Various governance mechanisms interact  The effect of ATPs depends on:  Product market competition [Giroud and Mueller, 2010]  The presence of large institutional investors [Cremer and Nair, 2005]  The effectiveness of CEO incentives depends on the strength of external governance [Kim and Lu, 2011]  We expect that the impact of ATPs on bidder returns to depend on the strength of external governance (EG) forces.  No main effect [ Masulis et al., 2007]  Interaction effect?

Data  Firms covered in Investor Responsibility Research Center (IRRC ) database  For the period of  1995,1998,2000,2002, 2004, and 2006 volumes of IRRC. Interpolate the skipping years.  Firms completed acquisitions from SDC M&A database  Control less than 50% and then 100% after the transaction  Deal value > $1m  Stock price data available in CRSP

Final sample  3,340 acquisitions in the period  by 1,217 unique firms  1,767 acquisitions in the pre-SOX period and 1,549 acquisitions in the post-SOX period.  We also utilize panel data set for these firms conducted acquisition at least once during the sample period.

First look at the data All Period Pre-SOX ( ) Post-SOX ( ) F[χ2]F[χ2] G-Index 9.29 [9.00] 9.29 [9.00] 9.29 [9.00] 0.00 [0.26] BCF 2.25 [2.00] 2.12 [2.00] 2.40 [2.00] *** [40.72] *** CAR MM (-2, +2) *** [0.311] *** [0.169] *** [0.493] *** 7.35 *** [7.85] *** CAR MAR (-2, +2) *** [0.530] *** ** [0.225] ** *** [0.732] *** 7.97 *** [11.29] *** N3,3401,7671,549

Table 1 Panel C. The correlation between CAR MM (-2, +2) and ATPs All Period Pre-SOX ( ) Post-SOX ( ) BCF ** G-Index ** 0.011

Table 2. Descriptive Statistics

The relation between bidder return and the BCF-index  CAR MM (-2,+2) =  +  1  BCF Index +  Controls +   Learning hypothesis:  Negative in the pre-SOX period  Insignificant in the post-SOX period  The influence of omitted factors:  Negative in the presence excess cash and under weak EG  Insignificant in the absence of excess cash and under strong EG  Weak EG:  pension ownership is below the sample median value  Industry NPM is above the median value

Table 3 Regression of acquirer returns on antitakeover provisions

Table 4 External governance, antitakeover provisions, and acquirer returns

Table 5 The interactive effect of antitakeover provisions and pension holdings, industry competition, and excess cash

Evidence so far:  The adverse impact of anti-takeover provisions on bidder returns:  In much narrowed context than previously thought  Only for firms amassing excess cash and facing weak EG  Not independent effect of ATPs  Suggesting that ATPs are not necessarily value-destroying for all firms

Robustness Tests in Table 6  Include CEO incentives  delta and vega  Include board characteristics  board size, % independent directors, CEO-chair duality  Use CAR MAR (-2, +2)  Alternative definition of EG  block ownership, industry median sales expenses  Alternative governance indices  G-index and classified boards  Sub-sample test for the pre- and post-SOX periods

Endogeneity  Econometric approach:  3SLS where CAR, BCF, and MtoB are jointly determined  Instrument variables approach  Dynamic panel GMM [Wintoki, Linck, and Netter, 2011]  Qualitative approach:  Actions of pension funds in marginalizing the adverse impact of ATPs  One possible channel:  Pension funds exert pressure on firms to eliminate ATPs when they hurt shareholder wealth  We thus test the probability of removal by strong EG

Summary of Table 7 3SLS estimation

Table 8 Probability of a decrease in governance index

Table 9 Probability of abolishing individual provision

The role of active pension funds ATPs Firm Value (a) Market Learning Hypothesis(b) Our Evidence

Conclusion  We identify the influence of omitted variables:  The effect of ATPs interact with excess cash and EG  ATPs alone are not necessarily value-destroying  A decrease in excess cash and an increase of pension ownership in the post- SOX period  Alternative explanation to market learning  Better explanation than market learning  Knowing the adverse impact of ATPs, market learning implies complete elimination of ATPs:  Pervasiveness of ATPs for a majority of firms until recent years  No evidence of price adjustment  No direct link between market learning and the disappearance of the adverse impact  Only partial elimination of ATPs by active pension funds  Thereby, the wealth effect of ATPs is neutral