Artículo de revista
Is there a corporate diversification discount or premium? Evidence from Chile
Fecha
2015Registro en:
Academia-Revista Latinoamericana de Administración Volumen: 28 Número: 3 2015
DOI: 10.1108/ARLA-10-2014-0168
Autor
Jara Bertín, Mauricio
López Iturriaga, Félix
Espinosa, Christian
Institución
Resumen
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to analyze the effect of the corporate ownership
diversification, i.e. how the involvement in the ownership of other non-financial firms affects the
value of listed firms. The authors control for the unrelated diversification when the firm has
different business segments in different sectors.
Design/methodology/approach - The authors analyze a sample of Chilean-listed firms between
2005 and 2009, in two stages. First, the authors compute the diversification premium or
discount, defined as the part of the firms' capitalization that stems from the diversification
strategy. Then, the authors regress the premium or discount against the business and
ownership diversification measures and other control variables.
Findings - In addition to a discount for unrelated business diversification, the authors find an
ownership diversification discount when non-financial firms are shareholders of other firms.
However, this discount turns into a premium when the firm gains the control of the owned firm,
especially in related sectors.
Originality/value - The authors pioneer the analysis of the ownership diversification in Latin
American firms. The results apply not only to Chile but also to a number of Latin American
countries since many of these countries have, in common with Chile, a concentrated corporate
ownership structure and a weak protection of investors' rights.