Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to shed light on the effect of French family control on the cash flow sensitivity of cash (CFSC). It also investigates the moderating effect of board of directors’ features on this relation.
Design/methodology/approach
Based on a sample of French-listed companies from 2012 to 2014, the authors use GLS regression models on panel data estimated with robust standard errors, clustered at the firm level.
Findings
The results show that family control is positively associated with the CFSC. This finding suggests that families are likely to hold more cash out of their cash flows for entrenchment and expropriation purposes. A further analysis shows that board size, independence and the two-tier board structure negatively affect the CFSC in family firms. Board efficiency is then a guarantee of minority shareholders’ interests against family expropriation risks in France.
Research limitations/implications
These findings suggest that French family firms are likely to expropriate minority interests by extracting rents through their cash holding behavior. However, in the presence of high-quality board features, the relation turns negative, suggesting that the quality of the board is an efficient corporate governance device that is likely to monitor family corporate decisions.
Originality/value
This paper extends previous research by investigating the moderating effect of board features on the relation between family control and the CFSC. The research provides a metric for agency problems that is the sensitivity of cash to cash flows and offers theoretical support for the agency argument of hoarding cash.
This paper investigates how CEO overconfidence affects the stock price crash risk in a competitive environment. Using a sample of French companies, we find that overconfident CEOs positively influence the stock price crash risk. This finding suggests that overconfident CEOs are more likely to keep money-losing projects and hoard bad news because they overestimate the long-term value of their projects, leading to stock price crashes. The results also show that the positive effect of CEO overconfidence on the stock price crash risk is less pronounced in competitive product markets. This result suggests that product market competition can help constraining the managerial irrationality effect on stock price crash risk.
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