Authors
Belén Villalonga, Raphael Amit
Publication date
2009/8/1
Journal
The Review of Financial Studies
Volume
22
Issue
8
Pages
3047-3091
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
In large U.S. corporations, founding families are the only blockholders whose control rights on average exceed their cash-flow rights. We analyze how they achieve this wedge, and at what cost. Indirect ownership through trusts, foundations, limited partnerships, and other corporations is prevalent but rarely creates a wedge (a pyramid). The primary sources of the wedge are dual-class stock, disproportionate board representation, and voting agreements. Each control-enhancing mechanism has a different impact on value. Our findings suggest that the potential agency conflict between large shareholders and public shareholders in the United States is as relevant as elsewhere in the world.
Total citations
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Scholar articles
B Villalonga, R Amit - The Review of Financial Studies, 2009