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Corporate Governance and Equity PricesPaul A. GompersHarvard Business School - Finance Unit; Harvard University - Entrepreneurial Management Unit; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER); European Corporate Governance Institute (ECGI) Joy L. IshiiStanford Graduate School of Business Andrew MetrickYale School of Management; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) Quarterly Journal of Economics, Vol. 118, No. 1, pp. 107-155, February 2003 Abstract: Shareholder rights vary across firms. Using the incidence of 24 unique governance rules, we construct a "Governance Index" to proxy for the level of shareholder rights at about 1500 large firms during the 1990s. An investment strategy that bought firms in the lowest decile of the index (strongest rights) and sold firms in the highest decile of the index (weakest rights) would have earned abnormal returns of 8.5 percent per year during the sample period. We find that firms with stronger shareholder rights had higher firm value, higher profits, higher sales growth, lower capital expenditures, and made fewer corporate acquisitions.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 67 Keywords: Corporate governance, shareholder rights, investor protection, agency problems, entrenched management, hostile takeovers, poison pills, golden parachutes, greenmail JEL Classification: G34, G14 working papers seriesDate posted: September 12, 2001Suggested CitationContact Information
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