D18 Monitoring Flashcards
Monitoring: Basic idea
Reducing information asymmetries by „hiring monitors”
Monitoring is performed by external parties (boards of directors, auditors, large shareholders, large creditors, investment banks, rating agencies)
Two types of monitoring
Active monitoring (4 bullet points)
- Interfering with management in order to increase the value of the investor’s claims (use of control rights)
- collect information about firm policies and intervene to prevent value decreasing policies
- forward looking
- intervention depends on the identity of the monitor (large shareholder, raider, creditor)
Monitoring by Board of Directors (BoD)
- define or approve major business decisions and corporate strategy (M&A, tender orders)
- executive compensation
- oversight of risk management
- audits
3 Types of directors
(1) Inside directors: members of a board who are (former) employees or family members of employees
(2) Grey directors: members of BoD who are not as directly connected to the firm as insiders, but have existing or potential business realtionships with the firm
(3) Outside (independent) directors: any member of BoD other than inside or grey directors
BoD: watchdogs or lapdogs?
(1) lack of independence
(2) insufficient attention
(3) insufficient incentives
(4) avoidance of conflict
- > Boards do interfere in some decisions, in particular during a crisis
Investor activism
- *Active monitors** intervene in:
(1) strategic decisions
(2) investments
(3) asset sales
(4) managerial compensation
(5) design of takeover defenses
(6) board size and composition - *control required**: formal control of a large owner, real control by a minority owner
QQ: Basic model investor activism
auf DIN A4
Hedge fund activism and firm performance
Activist hedge fund: propose strategic, operational, and financial remedies
attain (partial) success in 2/3 of cases
abnormal return around the announcement of activism is ∼7%
increases in payout, operating performance and higher CEO turnover after activism
Limits of active monitoring (5 bullet points)
- who monitors the monitor?
- congruance with investors: undermonitoring, collusion with management, self-dealing
- costs of providing proper incentives to the monitor
- perverse effects on the monitorees
- legal, fiscal and regulatory obstacles
Passive monitors
- Debt claim*: bank, commercial paper market, interbank market
- Equity claim*: speculators (analysts), derivative suits
- Equity-like claims*: credit enhancer, underwriter (firm commitment contract)
- Other claims*: rating agency, underwriter (best-efforts contract)
Passive monitoring (5 bullet points)
- not linked to the exercise of control rights
backward looking: measures current value
information is used to adjust the monitors position in the firm (invest further, stay put, disengage)
monitors: e.g. stock market analyst, short-term creditors
How does passive monitoring reduce agency problems?
Passive monitoring makes the firm’s stock value informative about past performance
=> used directly to reward management or to force boards to pressure management: management discipline
Monitoring by short-term creditors drains liquidity from poorly performing firms
Governance debate Anglo-Saxon vs Germany-Japan
Anglo-Saxon:
- well-developed stock markets, strong investor protection, disclosure requirements, shareholder activism, proxy fights, takeovers
Criticism: short-termism
Germany-Japan: important role relationship bank, private firms and a thin stock market, concentrated ownership, limited managerial contests
Criticism: collusive, favoring entrenched manager