2018
DOI: 10.1111/jofi.12600
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Institutional and Legal Context in Natural Experiments: The Case of State Antitakeover Laws

Abstract: We argue and demonstrate empirically that a firm's institutional and legal context has first‐order effects in tests that use state antitakeover laws for identification. A priori, the size and direction of a law's effect on a firm's takeover protection depends on (i) other state antitakeover laws, (ii) preexisting firm‐level takeover defenses, and (iii) the legal regime as reflected by important court decisions. In addition, (iv) state antitakeover laws are not exogenous for many easily identifiable firms. We s… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

3
72
0

Year Published

2018
2018
2023
2023

Publication Types

Select...
8

Relationship

0
8

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 223 publications
(75 citation statements)
references
References 201 publications
(415 reference statements)
3
72
0
Order By: Relevance
“…A total of 35 states in the U.S. have adopted constituency statutes (see Karpoff & Wittry, 2017); five of them adopted the statutes during the sample period . 19 Because the enactment of the statutes does not reflect any firm's strategic decision, such "treatments" offer plausibly exogenous variation in a firm's orientation toward stakeholders.…”
Section: Constituency Statutesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A total of 35 states in the U.S. have adopted constituency statutes (see Karpoff & Wittry, 2017); five of them adopted the statutes during the sample period . 19 Because the enactment of the statutes does not reflect any firm's strategic decision, such "treatments" offer plausibly exogenous variation in a firm's orientation toward stakeholders.…”
Section: Constituency Statutesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Third, while the state business combination laws, the focus of many U.S. studies, were a single class of various state-level takeover statutes, the international M&A laws in our paper contain a broad spectrum of takeover provisions including, among others, the squeeze-out rules mandated by the Takeover Act in Austria and the board neutrality rule provisioned in the Takeover Panel Act in Ireland. This distinction is important, as recent studies show that the state-level business combination laws might not have had a discernible impact on takeover activity and corporate policies, casting doubt on the effectiveness of using the business combination laws alone in proxying for governance quality (Cain, McKeon, and Solomon [2017], Karpoff and Wittry [2018]). Thus, international M&A laws, encompassing a more diverse set of statutes designed to reduce frictions in M&As, allow us to gain new insights into the effect of the market for corporate control.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In an exhaustive analysis, Atanasov and Black (2016) document that use of shock-based designs approximately doubled from 4% to 11% of empirical governance papers between the 2001-2006 and the 2007-2011 periods. As surveyed by Karpoff and Wittry (2015), changes in state-level anti-takeover laws are often exploited as a source of quasi-exogenous variation in governance pressure. 2 As a final example, shock-based inference is common in studying real investment, which, along with leverage, is perhaps the most commonly studied dependent variable in empirical corporate finance.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%