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1 Globalization of Corporate Governance: A European Perspective TROND RANDØY & JOCHEN JUNGEILGES AGDER UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, NORWAY LARS OXELHEIM LUND UNIVERSITY, SWEDEN Presented at Fudan University May 13, 2006
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2 Introduction Research issue: Does American influence in large public European firms affect their corporate governance? Does American influence in top European firms affect dismissal risk? Background: Global increase in CEO pay Global focus on corporate governance Globalization and firm performance
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3 Motivation Access to global financing essential for growing countries. Globalization of capital affects firms: 30-35% of all shares in Scandinavia Upgrading (even harmonization) of national corporate governance systems (OECD, 1999) Investors are willing to pay a premium for well- governed firms (McKinsey, 2000) Do some of the gains of American (institutional ownership) corporate governance come at the cost of other stakeholders – such as higher dismissal risk?
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4 CEO succession model Dismissal model; change of being dismissed non- voluntarily Performance American influence -Corporate control -Corporate monitoring (listing) Controls; -firm size -firm industry -observation year -country -CEO age -CEO tenure)
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5 Hypotheses: cross-listing HYPOTHESIS 1: THERE IS A POSITIVE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN AMERICAN EXCHANGE LISTING AND PERFORMANCE CONTINGENT DISMISSAL RISK. Agency theory: higher rewards & higher risks Increased monitoring by auditors/regulators Might not be necessary with large European owners? Change of corporate culture – English as corporate language Signaling Compliance with information needs of US based investors
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6 Hypotheses: board membership HYPOTHESIS 2: THERE IS A POSITIVE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN AMERICAN BOARD MEMBERSHIP AND PERFORMANCE CONTINGENT DISMISSAL RISK Agency theory: higher rewards & higher risks Strengthening of incentive-based systems Change of corporate culture – English as corporate language Affect the behavior of the board Signaling Increased trust among US based investors
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7 Population: succession events 270 succession events in top 250 European public firms between 2000-2004 Data collected by Booz, Allen & Hamilton, and additional variables supplemented by us (15% non-response)
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8 Country and industry data from succession events
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9 Descriptive statistics: CEO age & tenure, cross-listing and American board membership 67% of succession event from firms with American cross-listing 18% of succession event from firms with American board membership
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10 Industry performance and dismissal Forced dismissals Voluntary dismissals
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11 Bivariate tests: Spearman’s Rank Corr. & Cramer’s V
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12 Methodology: Binary response model: Logit Estimation procedure: Max Likelihood MacFadden’s R 2 or Pseudo R 2
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13 CEO dismissal risk: multivariate models
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14 Main findings American cross-listing does not increase performance contingent dismissal risk in European firms Does not alter dismissal behavior – too weak of a mechanism American board membership increase performance contingent dismissal risk in European firms Corporate governance of boards is affected by nationality of board members – affects behavior Limitations & weaknesses Confounding effects – are European firms with American influence different than other firms We still don’t know if there are to few or too many dismissals
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