Cross-Shares, Board Interlocks and Firm Value in Latin America: Evidence from Colombia

Universidad de los Andes, School of Management, Management Galleys Working Paper No. 19

50 Pages Posted: 21 Jul 2009 Last revised: 21 Jul 2009

See all articles by Carlos Pombo

Carlos Pombo

Universidad de los Andes, Colombia - School of Management

Luis H. Gutierrez

Universidad del Rosario

Roberto Fortich

Universidad Tecnologica de Bolivar Department of Finance and International Business - Instituto de Estudios para el Desarrollo (IDE)

Date Written: June 1, 2009

Abstract

This study examines the relations among large shareholders, board interlocks, outside directors and firm value in an Latin American emerging market, in whichthere is no restriction on cross-share ownership structures and voting power is leveraged through business group affiliation.We base our working hypothesis about the effect of board interlocks and directors’ independent behavior on firm performance on a model of collusive behavior between the largest shareholder/CEO and the remaining top blockholders with seats on the board. In this context, outsider board members, and insider directors with multiple appointments within the business group, might exert full control on management investment decisions and therefore induce blockholder control contestability behavior. The empirical analysis relies on data from a sample of 75 equity-issuing corporations in Colombia during 1998-2004. Forty-seven of these are holding firms belonging to the two largest local conglomerates in the country. Measurement results show that the fraction of outside directors is lower than those reported both for mature capital markets and for the largest economies in the region (e.g., Brazil and Mexico). Regarding board interlocks, the study finds that one quarter of boards in the sample has at least one member who is the CEO of another firm. Econometric results show that board interlocks, women’s participation, multiple blockholders’ contestability and affiliation with a business group have a positive effect on firm value, while CEOs who sit on their own firms’ boards have a negative effect on firm value; they also increase potential tunneling and rent diversion, and this can be exacerbated by the separation between ownership and control rights of the largest stakeholder.

Keywords: Board independence, corporate governance, firm value, control contestability, colombian corporations

JEL Classification: G32, L14, L22

Suggested Citation

Pombo, Carlos and Gutierrez, Luis H. and Fortich, Roberto Carlos, Cross-Shares, Board Interlocks and Firm Value in Latin America: Evidence from Colombia (June 1, 2009). Universidad de los Andes, School of Management, Management Galleys Working Paper No. 19, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1366061 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1366061

Carlos Pombo (Contact Author)

Universidad de los Andes, Colombia - School of Management ( email )

Carrera Primera # 18A-12
Bogotá
Colombia
571-3394949 (Phone)

Luis H. Gutierrez

Universidad del Rosario ( email )

Casa Pedro Fermín
Calle 14 # 4-69
Bogota
Colombia
(571) 2970200 ext 676 (Phone)
(571) 3445763 (Fax)

HOME PAGE: http://www.urosario.edu.co/FASE3/profesores/doce_eco_luis_gutierrez.htm

Roberto Carlos Fortich

Universidad Tecnologica de Bolivar Department of Finance and International Business - Instituto de Estudios para el Desarrollo (IDE) ( email )

Manga Cr 21 #25-92 Calle del Bouquet
Cartagena, Bolivar
Colombia
(5) 660 60 41 Ext. 491 (Phone)
(5) 660 43 17 (Fax)

HOME PAGE: http://www.unitecnologica.edu.co/finanzas/docentes

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