1998
DOI: 10.1086/250006
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Why Higher Takeover Premia Protect Minority Shareholders

Abstract: Posttakeover moral hazard by the acquirer and free-riding by the target shareholders lead the former to acquire as few shares as necessary to gain control. As moral hazard is most severe under such low ownership concentration, inefficiencies arise in successful takeovers. Moreover, share supply is shown to be upward-sloping. Rules promoting ownership concentration limit both agency costs and This project was initiated when all three authors were at the Financial Markets Group at the London School of Economics.… Show more

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Cited by 309 publications
(155 citation statements)
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“…Burkart et al (1998) and Bebchuk et al (1999) argue that patterns of corporate ownership are critical to the level of private benefits extracted by the controlling shareholders. Ownership and control patterns such as pyramids, cross-ownership ties and dual-class share structures permit controlling shareholders to reduce the cash flow rights associated with voting rights.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Burkart et al (1998) and Bebchuk et al (1999) argue that patterns of corporate ownership are critical to the level of private benefits extracted by the controlling shareholders. Ownership and control patterns such as pyramids, cross-ownership ties and dual-class share structures permit controlling shareholders to reduce the cash flow rights associated with voting rights.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This ensures that relinquishing a given fraction of private benefits is more costly for higher-valued types, that is, the single crossing property holds. 13 As we show below, the assumption of Φ(·) non-decreasing is satisfied in well-known variants of the tender offer game.…”
Section: Propositionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…Conversely, conditional on symmetric information, she chooses offer terms that maximize her private returns to effort. Any gain in security benefits she brings about is extracted by the free-riding shareholders, as shown by Burkart et al (1998). To limit such extraction, the bidder uses call options to "cap" her exposure to security benefits, thereby diluting post-takeover incentives.…”
Section: Moral Hazard Cost Of Signalingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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