Artículos de revistas
Corporate governance in Latin American firms: contestability of control and firm value
Gobierno corporativo en empresas latinoamericanas: disputabilidad de control y valor de la empresa
Registro en:
Business Research Quarterly. Oct-Dec2019, Vol. 22 Issue 4, p257-274
2340-9436
Autor
Jara, Mauricio
López-Iturriaga, Félix
San-Martín, Pablo
Saona, Paolo
Resumen
Using a sample of 595 firms listed in the capital markets of Argentina, Brazil, Chile,
Colombia, Mexico, and Peru for the period of 2000---2015, we confirm prior literature by showing that when power distribution among several large shareholders (contestability) increases,
firms’ financial performance is enhanced. More interestingly, we find that these relations are
even more significant in family-owned firms, emphasising the relevance of contesting control in
this kind of firm. Furthermore, contestability has a greater influence in family firms that have
the most concentrated ownership. We also find that the legal framework attenuates the impact
of the balance of ownership. Here, contesting control acts as an internal corporate governance
mechanism that provides an alternative to the external legal setting. Taken together, our results
mean that in institutional settings characterised by weak investor protection and possible conflicts of interest among shareholders, oversight by multiple large, non-related shareholders
(balanced ownership concentration) becomes an important governance mechanism.