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Of What Value are Shareholder Proposals Sponsored by Public Pension Funds?


Andrew K. Prevost


Ohio University - Department of Finance

Ramesh P. Rao


Oklahoma State University - Stillwater - Department of Finance


The Journal of Business, April 2000

Abstract:     
This study addresses the empirical question, "Of what value are shareholder proposals sponsored by public pension funds?" and finds that the primary function of a proposal is to act as a signaling mechanism in alerting the market that management is unwilling or unable to negotiate a settlement with the public fund in order to prevent the submission of the proposal. The sample selection process allows the study to isolate a clean, uncontaminated sample of firms targeted by public funds. Firms receiving proposals for the first time experience a transitory decrease in shareholder wealth, while firms that are targeted repeatedly exhibit negative wealth effects over much wider event windows. These results are robust to both parametric and non-parametric event study methodologies. Long run changes in the firms' operating performance and stock price returns are consistent with these results. Repeat target firms exhibit long run declining performance, while the one-time target firms exhibit positive (but insignificant) differences in performance. Comparison of corporate governance characteristics provides some insight into these differences.

JEL Classification: G34

Accepted Paper Series


Date posted: October 27, 1999  

Suggested Citation

Prevost, Andrew K. and Rao, Ramesh P., Of What Value are Shareholder Proposals Sponsored by Public Pension Funds?. The Journal of Business, April 2000. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=178912

Contact Information

Andrew K. Prevost (Contact Author)
Ohio University - Department of Finance ( email )
236 Copeland Hall
Athens, OH 45701
United States
Ramesh P. Rao
Oklahoma State University - Stillwater - Department of Finance ( email )
Spears School of Business
Stillwater, OK 74078-4011
United States
405-744-1385 (Phone)
405-744-5180 (Fax)
Feedback to SSRN (Beta)


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