We present a simple framework for dual‐class stock shares in which common shareholders receive public and private cash flows (i.e., dividends and any private benefit of holding voting rights) and preferred shareholders only receive public cash flows. We isolate these two cash flows in order to identify the role of voting rights on equity‐holders' wealth. In particular, using a structural cointegrated VAR model, we find a negative relationship between the value of the voting right and the preferred shareholders' wealth
Voting rights are a basic shareholder-protection mechanism. Outside of the core voting requirements ...
This article analyzes the effects that institutional design of the firm has on the allocation of con...
This paper demonstrates that non-voting shares can promote takeovers. When the bidder has private in...
This paper examines the relative share pricing of 98 firms with two classes of common stock trading ...
We study transactions of voting rights. In our sample of 67 dual class unifications superior vote sh...
I use a unique sample of 617 U.S. firms adopting the dual class structures for at least a period of ...
This paper examines the relative share pricing of 98 firms with two classes of common stock trading ...
This thesis consists of four chapters focusing primarily on the area of Corporate Governance. In the...
We examine whether, and to what extent, shareholder voting rights affect institutional investment de...
Over the past several years, corporate law scholarship has carefully analyzed the effects of dual-cl...
The theoretical literature on security-voting structure can be organized around three questions: Wha...
A corporation's securities provide the holder with particular claims on the firm's income stream and...
We survey the empirical literature on disproportional ownership, i.e. the use of mechanisms that sep...
We survey the empirical literature on disproportional ownership, i.e. the use of mechanisms that sep...
We survey the empirical literature on disproportional ownership, i.e. the use of mechanisms that sep...
Voting rights are a basic shareholder-protection mechanism. Outside of the core voting requirements ...
This article analyzes the effects that institutional design of the firm has on the allocation of con...
This paper demonstrates that non-voting shares can promote takeovers. When the bidder has private in...
This paper examines the relative share pricing of 98 firms with two classes of common stock trading ...
We study transactions of voting rights. In our sample of 67 dual class unifications superior vote sh...
I use a unique sample of 617 U.S. firms adopting the dual class structures for at least a period of ...
This paper examines the relative share pricing of 98 firms with two classes of common stock trading ...
This thesis consists of four chapters focusing primarily on the area of Corporate Governance. In the...
We examine whether, and to what extent, shareholder voting rights affect institutional investment de...
Over the past several years, corporate law scholarship has carefully analyzed the effects of dual-cl...
The theoretical literature on security-voting structure can be organized around three questions: Wha...
A corporation's securities provide the holder with particular claims on the firm's income stream and...
We survey the empirical literature on disproportional ownership, i.e. the use of mechanisms that sep...
We survey the empirical literature on disproportional ownership, i.e. the use of mechanisms that sep...
We survey the empirical literature on disproportional ownership, i.e. the use of mechanisms that sep...
Voting rights are a basic shareholder-protection mechanism. Outside of the core voting requirements ...
This article analyzes the effects that institutional design of the firm has on the allocation of con...
This paper demonstrates that non-voting shares can promote takeovers. When the bidder has private in...