We examine the link between minority shareholders' rights and corporate governance by studying institutional investors' voting patterns in a concentrated ownership environment. Institutions rarely vote against insider-sponsored proposals even when the law empowers the minority. Institutions vote against compensation-related proposals more often than against related party transactions even when minority shareholders cannot influence outcomes. Potentially conflicted institutions are more likely to vote for insiders' proposals than stand-alone investors, regardless of their effect on outcomes. A plausible conclusion is that empowering minority shareholders affects the selection of proposals but not actual voting; another is that empowering minority shareholders is ineffective without addressing conflicts of interest. © 2011 The Authors 2012.
CITATION STYLE
Hamdani, A., & Yafeh, Y. (2013). Institutional investors as minority shareholders. Review of Finance, 17(2), 691–725. https://doi.org/10.1093/rof/rfr039
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