Einde inhoudsopgave
The Decoupling of Voting and Economic Ownership (IVOR nr. 88) 2012/2.2.1
2.2.1 Market Efficiency
mr. M.C. Schouten, datum 01-06-2012
- Datum
01-06-2012
- Auteur
mr. M.C. Schouten
- JCDI
JCDI:ADS599419:1
- Vakgebied(en)
Ondernemingsrecht / Rechtspersonenrecht
Voetnoten
Voetnoten
G. Ferrarini and P. Giudici, 'Financial Scandals and the Role of Private Enforcement: The Parmalat Case', in J. Armour and J. McCahery (eds), After Enron (Oxford, Hart Publishing 2006), 116 (noting that one of the causes of the demise of Parmalat was that funds were being diverted to Tanzi family members and their private companies).
The importance of ownership disclosure for these purposes has recently been underlined by a high profile case in which Goldman Sachs and ABN AMRO were found liable in connection with the IPO of an internet company in 2000, because the prospectus failed to adequately disclose the particulars of a reduction of the CEO's ownership stake prior to the IPO. Dutch Supreme Court, 27 November 2009, LJN BH2162 (in this particular case, the court considered that the relevance of the information derived not from agency considerations but from the fact that the transaction conveyed information about the CEO's valuation of the company. This is what is referred to later in this section as ownership disclosure's function of providing information on trading interest).
Schouten, supra note 9 at 137.
See, eg, A. Brav, W. Jiang, R.S. Thomas and F. Partnoy, 'Hedge Fund Activism, Corporate Govemance, and Firm Performance' (2006) 63 Journal of Finance 1729, 1755 (using a sample consisting of 1,059 hedge fund-target pairs for the period 2001-2006, the authors measure effects of Schedule 13D filings and document abnormal return of approx. 2.0% on the filing day and the following day; afterwards, the abnormal returns keep trending up to a total 7.2% in twenty days).
For a discussion, see Schouten, supra note 9 at 138-148.
See M.B. Fox, 'Civil Liability and Mandatory Disclosure' (2009) 109 Columbia Law Review 237, 252-69 (offering an explanation of how market efficiency can contribute to a more efficient allocation of resources in the economy).
Ownership disclosure can improve market efficiency through various mechanisme. At the time of a public offering, disclosure of the identity of large shareholders, and the number of voting rights they hold, enables investors to anticipate agency costs. Consider the presence of a controlling shareholder, for instance the founder. In some cases, such presence may signal an increase in agency costs due to a heightened risk of private benefit extraction. One way to extract private benefits is through tunneling, as illustrated by the case of Italian dairy producer Parmalat.1 In other cases, the presence of a controlling shareholder may signal a decrease in agency costs, because of active monitoring of management. By requiring issuers to disclose their ownership structure in the prospectus, investors are enabled to make an informed estimate of the implications for the value of the share2
Once the shares are floating, disclosure of the entry or exit of large shareholders enables investors to continue to anticipate agency costs. The appearance of an activist hedge fund, for example, may signal an increase in monitoring. By requiring shareholders to disclose major acquisitions, again, investors are enabled to make an informed estimate of the implications for the value of the share — this is one of the objectives of the US disclosure regime.3 Indeed, we often see share prices responding positively to the news that an activist hedge fund has acquired a stake.4
Ownership disclosure can improve market efficiency through several other mechanisms, namely by creating transparency of economie interests of major shareholders, of trading interest and of the size of the free float. We do not discuss these mechanisms here in detail.5 The bottom line is that by promoting share price accuracy, ownership disclosure can contribute to market efficiency, and thus ultimately to an efficient allocation of resources in the economy.6