The majority shareholder in a closely held corporation may use its control of the corporate machinery to appropriate wealth from the minority, and it is difficult for the majority to make a binding commitment not to do so. This paper models the interaction between majority and minority shareholders as a trust game in which the majority is constrained by the possibility of non-legal sanctions, including family or social disapproval and loss of reputation. The paper applies the analysis to the longstanding debate over appropriate exit rules for close corporation shareholders. Where the parties are well-informed and rational and judicial valuations are unbiased, giving the minority the unconditional right to e cashed out should reduce majority...
The phrase "going private" refers to a transaction in which the controlling shareholders who are ins...
We examine whether a large shareholder can alleviate conflicts of interest between managers and shar...
This study addresses the problem of explaining the emergence and viability of coalitions among share...
A central problem for closely held corporations is the possibility of op-portunistic behavior by a m...
To understand the potentially dramatic consequences of oppression in a close corporation it is in th...
The separation of control and ownership – the ability of a small group effectively to control a comp...
The separation of control and ownership – the ability of a small group effectively to control a comp...
Investment in the corporate venture may sometimes be a risky venture for the minority shareholders....
This paper analyzes investment decisions and share trade when the owners of a firm are not unanimous...
The basis of this thesis is the exit problem in close corporations and the protections available to ...
Today in many countries around the world the procedure of the compulsory purchase of the shares of m...
Governance and finance literature warns that majority shareholders can extract private benefits of c...
Minority shareholders have been facing problems generated by oppressive behavior of majority shareho...
Large shareholders of firms with majority bIocks are often at the heIm of their companies and do not...
More than 90 percent of all US firms are close corporations, and these firms account for 51 percent ...
The phrase "going private" refers to a transaction in which the controlling shareholders who are ins...
We examine whether a large shareholder can alleviate conflicts of interest between managers and shar...
This study addresses the problem of explaining the emergence and viability of coalitions among share...
A central problem for closely held corporations is the possibility of op-portunistic behavior by a m...
To understand the potentially dramatic consequences of oppression in a close corporation it is in th...
The separation of control and ownership – the ability of a small group effectively to control a comp...
The separation of control and ownership – the ability of a small group effectively to control a comp...
Investment in the corporate venture may sometimes be a risky venture for the minority shareholders....
This paper analyzes investment decisions and share trade when the owners of a firm are not unanimous...
The basis of this thesis is the exit problem in close corporations and the protections available to ...
Today in many countries around the world the procedure of the compulsory purchase of the shares of m...
Governance and finance literature warns that majority shareholders can extract private benefits of c...
Minority shareholders have been facing problems generated by oppressive behavior of majority shareho...
Large shareholders of firms with majority bIocks are often at the heIm of their companies and do not...
More than 90 percent of all US firms are close corporations, and these firms account for 51 percent ...
The phrase "going private" refers to a transaction in which the controlling shareholders who are ins...
We examine whether a large shareholder can alleviate conflicts of interest between managers and shar...
This study addresses the problem of explaining the emergence and viability of coalitions among share...