Internal governance and corporate acquisition activities

被引:1
作者
Qiao, Yankuo [1 ]
机构
[1] Rutgers State Univ, Dept Finance & Econ, Rutgers Business Sch, 1 Washington Pl, Newark, NJ 07102 USA
关键词
Internal governance; Agency theory; Executive horizon; Corporate acquisition activities; Post-acquisition performance; ACQUIRING FIRMS; MERGER ACTIVITY; CEO AGE; PERFORMANCE; MANAGEMENT; INVESTMENT; OWNERSHIP; HORIZON; LONG; INCENTIVES;
D O I
10.1007/s40821-020-00180-8
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
The literature shows that the performance of bidders has been historically poor both in the short run and in the long run. Agency theory tells us that unless CEO owns 100% of the firm, the decision-making process would deviate from shareholder value maximization. Building upon the theory of internal governance by Acharya et al. (J Financ 66(3):689-720, 2011), this study documents the salutary effect of the novel governance mechanism on corporate acquisition activities. Internal governance is optimal if neither the CEO nor her subordinates are dominating. The curvilinear relationship suggests that when power and responsibility sharing is balanced in acquiring firms, myopic CEOs would have lower acquisition propensity, lower likelihood of targeting public firms, higher deal completion rate, and stronger short term gains. A system of regression equations is applied to mitigate the concerns about potential endogeneity and selection bias. Moreover, the empirical evidence demonstrates that good internal governance has strong predictive power for long term performance in the post-acquisition period, which sheds light on the influential role of subordinates in post-deal integration.
引用
收藏
页码:373 / 408
页数:36
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Family Firms, Corporate Governance and Export
    Minetti, Raoul
    Murro, Pierluigi
    Zhu, Susan Chun
    ECONOMICA, 2015, 82 : 1177 - 1216
  • [42] Corporate Debt Maturity and Acquisition Decisions
    Fu, Xudong
    Tang, Tian
    FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT, 2016, 45 (03) : 737 - 768
  • [43] Corporate governance: What can we learn from public governance?
    Benz, Matthias
    Frey, Bruno S.
    ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT REVIEW, 2007, 32 (01) : 92 - 104
  • [44] The role of corporate governance on corporate tax avoidance: a developing country perspective
    Koay, Guo Yao
    Sapiei, Noor Sharoja
    JOURNAL OF ACCOUNTING IN EMERGING ECONOMIES, 2025, 15 (01) : 84 - 105
  • [45] The Effects of Corporate Governance on Credit Ratings: The Role of Corporate Social Responsibility
    Lin, Cho-Min
    Chen, Clara Chia Sheng
    Yang, Sheng-Yung
    Wang, Wan-Ru
    EMERGING MARKETS FINANCE AND TRADE, 2020, 56 (05) : 1093 - 1112
  • [46] Walking the Talk? A Corporate Governance Perspective on Corporate Social Responsibility Decoupling
    Ali Gull, Ammar
    Hussain, Nazim
    Akbar Khan, Sana
    Nadeem, Muhammad
    Mansour Zalata, Alaa
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT, 2023, 34 (04) : 2186 - 2211
  • [47] The role of corporate governance in the nexus between litigation risk and corporate innovation
    Iftikhar, Kainat
    Bagh, Tanveer
    Khan, Muhammad Asif
    BORSA ISTANBUL REVIEW, 2024, 24 (04) : 732 - 746
  • [48] Internal Governance and Cost Stickiness
    Zhang, Bo
    Yang, Limei
    Zhou, Ruixue
    JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTING RESEARCH, 2023, 35 (01) : 173 - 194
  • [49] Corporate Governance and Diversification
    Gleason, Kimberly C.
    Kim, Inho
    Kim, Yong H.
    Kim, Young Sang
    ASIA-PACIFIC JOURNAL OF FINANCIAL STUDIES, 2012, 41 (01) : 1 - 31
  • [50] CORPORATE GOVERNANCE DEVIANCE
    Aguilera, Ruth V.
    Judge, William Q.
    Terjesen, Siri A.
    ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT REVIEW, 2018, 43 (01) : 87 - 109