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  4. Ownership Structure and the Separation of Voting and Cash Flow Rights - Evidence from Switzerland
 
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Ownership Structure and the Separation of Voting and Cash Flow Rights - Evidence from Switzerland

Journal
Applied Financial Economics
ISSN
0960-3107
ISSN-Digital
1466-4305
Type
journal article
Date Issued
2009-09-01
Author(s)
Schmid, Markus  
DOI
10.1080/09603100902984350
Abstract
This paper analyzes the relation between a firm's equity capital structure, managerial and outside block ownership, and firm value based on a unique and hand-collected sample of 545 observations on 174 Swiss firms over the period from 2002 to 2005. While previous papers concentrate either on managerial ownership or on blockholdings, which can but need not be managerial, this paper distinguishes between the two and investigates the relative importance of them. This distinction turns out to be important. I find the probability that a firm has a dual-class structure to be positively related to managerial ownership, the ownership of the single largest shareholder, and inside blockholders more generally while negatively related to the ownership of "true" outside blockholders such as listed companies, mutual and pension funds. Moreover, I present strong evidence that the aim of the dual-class structure is to secure the largest shareholder's and, more specifically, inside blockholders' control over the firm. Most importantly, I find evidence that these inside controlling shareholders take advantage of the dual-class structure by extracting private benefits of control.
Language
English
Keywords
Dual-class shares
voting rights restrictions
cash flow rights and voting rights
managerial ownership
block ownership
HSG Classification
contribution to scientific community
Refereed
Yes
Publisher
Routledge
Publisher place
London
Volume
19
Number
18
Start page
1453
End page
1476
Pages
24
URL
https://www.alexandria.unisg.ch/handle/20.500.14171/75631
Subject(s)

business studies

Division(s)

s/bf - Swiss Institut...

Eprints ID
210174

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