2009
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.1410197
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Market Liquidity and Ownership Structure with Weak Protection for Minority Shareholders: Evidence from Brazil and Chile

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Cited by 6 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Since average transaction costs depend on the number of shareholders participating in trade, lower free float will increase transaction costs and adversely affect liquidity (Demsetz, 1968). In another related study, Cueto (2009) show that ownership concentration by dominant shareholders result in reducing information asymmetries and, thereby leads to increase in liquidity. Holmström and Tirole (1993) argue that concentrated ownership reduces the benefit of monitoring by stock market participants, thereby reducing the amount of public information.…”
Section: Ownership Concentration and Liquiditymentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Since average transaction costs depend on the number of shareholders participating in trade, lower free float will increase transaction costs and adversely affect liquidity (Demsetz, 1968). In another related study, Cueto (2009) show that ownership concentration by dominant shareholders result in reducing information asymmetries and, thereby leads to increase in liquidity. Holmström and Tirole (1993) argue that concentrated ownership reduces the benefit of monitoring by stock market participants, thereby reducing the amount of public information.…”
Section: Ownership Concentration and Liquiditymentioning
confidence: 94%
“…In fact, insider trading regulations (market-level) and external monitoring by shareholders (firm-level) is justified in large part by the need to ameliorate the problems associated with asymmetric information. While some of these insider trading regulations are specifically designed to help facilitate external monitoring, researchers disagree about their social utility (compare with Li, Moshirian, Pham, & Zein, 2006with Becht, 2003, and Padilla, 2005, even though domestic and international evidence supports the hypothesis that concentrating ownership and liquidity are inversely related (Cueto, 2009: Earle, Kucsera, & Telegdy, 2005Ginglinger & Hamon, 2007;Naes, 2004).…”
Section: Issue 7: Liquidity and The Cost Of Capitalmentioning
confidence: 99%