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Company Structure The empirical literature on ownership and control is conveniently divided into two themes. The first examines the influence of ownership structure on the dividend policies of the firm. The second investigates the impact of management shareholdings on the firm’s debt ratio. Although clearly relevant to capital structure, dividend policy is a major subject in its own right and the literature on this topic is well surveyed by Short (1994). Accordingly, in this section we concentrate on the impact of management shareholdings on debt ratios. Continued Zeckhauser and Pound (1990) test whether large shareholders improve corporate performance by encouraging performance-tilting, the practice which arises under asymmetric information between shareholders and managers and results in improvements of corporate performance without the diminution of managerial effort or of excess pay. This is because large shareholders can exploit economies of scale in information costs, which reduces the agency (monitoring) costs of debt. If true, this implies that the leverage of firms with at least one large shareholder should be higher than that of a firm that does not have a large shareholder. In fact, Zeckhauser and Pound (1990) find that there is no significant difference in leverage ratios between such groups of firms. They conclude that large shareholders appear to perform a monitoring function only for equity owners and do not have a positive impact on debtholders. Continued Friend and Hasbrouck’s (1988) study differs from Zeckhauser and Pound in terms of investigating whether there is a systematic relationship between insider (manager) holdings and debt. Two proxies are used here: the first is a fractional ownership variable, the largest fraction of shares that is held by an insider, whilst the second is an absolute variable, the market value ofequity held by the largest insider. A priori, there could be either a negative or positive relationship between debt and insider holdings: negative, if the rise in bankruptcy costs for insiders outweigh the reduction in their agency costs; positive, if the reverse is true. Friend and Hasbrouck find that, when both the fractional and absolute insider holdings are included, the former becomes positive and significant whilst the latter becomes more negative. Continued In addition, the explanatory power of the fractional variable dominates that of the absolute. These results provide some weak support for the hypothesis that insider ownership does reduce the agency cost of debt. However, in these regressions, it should be noted that causality runs from the insider holding measure to the debt ratio. Friend and Hasbrouck suggest that a reverse causality may also occur: a high level of debt increases the risk of firm stock, and tends to drive out outside shareholders. Word Study Ownership Corporate Shareholders Exploit Significant Improvements Regressions Insider Causality Whilst Equity
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