We examine a primary outcome of corporate governance, namely, the ability to identify and terminate poorly performing CEOs, to test the effectiveness of U.S. investor protections in improving the corporate governance of cross-listed firms. We find that firms from weak investor protection regimes that are cross-listed on a major U.S. Exchange are more likely to terminate poorly performing CEOs than non-cross-listed firms. Cross-listings on exchanges that do not require the adoption of stringent investor protections (OTC, private placements, and London listings) are not associated with a higher propensity to remove poorly performing CEOs. Copyright (c) 2008 The American Finance Association.
Using the change in ordinary dividend payout as a proxy for improved governance, I show that cross-l...
Governance has many dimensions - corporate governance pertains to the firm's management whilst sover...
Based on the Legal Bonding Hypothesis, proposed by Coffee and Stulz (1999), cross-listing firms can ...
We examine a primary outcome of corporate governance, the ability to identify and terminate poorly p...
We examine a primary outcome of corporate governance, the ability to identify and terminate poorly p...
We examine a primary outcome of corporate governance, the ability to identify and terminate poorly p...
We examine a primary outcome of corporate governance, the ability to identify and terminate poorly p...
We examine a primary outcome of corporate governance, the ability to identify and terminate poorly p...
We examine a primary outcome of corporate governance, the ability to identify and terminate poorly p...
[[abstract]]The bonding hypothesis is based on the controlling shareholder in an environment of host...
[[abstract]]The bonding hypothesis is based on the controlling shareholder in an environment of host...
The effectiveness of corporate governance is a major factor in forecasting firm performance. We exam...
This article questions the bonding role of cross-listing. Based on a comprehensive survey of the lit...
This paper examines the relationship between cross-listing and corporate governance for Canadian fir...
Using the change in ordinary dividend payout as a proxy for improved governance, I show that cross-l...
Using the change in ordinary dividend payout as a proxy for improved governance, I show that cross-l...
Governance has many dimensions - corporate governance pertains to the firm's management whilst sover...
Based on the Legal Bonding Hypothesis, proposed by Coffee and Stulz (1999), cross-listing firms can ...
We examine a primary outcome of corporate governance, the ability to identify and terminate poorly p...
We examine a primary outcome of corporate governance, the ability to identify and terminate poorly p...
We examine a primary outcome of corporate governance, the ability to identify and terminate poorly p...
We examine a primary outcome of corporate governance, the ability to identify and terminate poorly p...
We examine a primary outcome of corporate governance, the ability to identify and terminate poorly p...
We examine a primary outcome of corporate governance, the ability to identify and terminate poorly p...
[[abstract]]The bonding hypothesis is based on the controlling shareholder in an environment of host...
[[abstract]]The bonding hypothesis is based on the controlling shareholder in an environment of host...
The effectiveness of corporate governance is a major factor in forecasting firm performance. We exam...
This article questions the bonding role of cross-listing. Based on a comprehensive survey of the lit...
This paper examines the relationship between cross-listing and corporate governance for Canadian fir...
Using the change in ordinary dividend payout as a proxy for improved governance, I show that cross-l...
Using the change in ordinary dividend payout as a proxy for improved governance, I show that cross-l...
Governance has many dimensions - corporate governance pertains to the firm's management whilst sover...
Based on the Legal Bonding Hypothesis, proposed by Coffee and Stulz (1999), cross-listing firms can ...