详情
The Effects of Market Development on Controlling Shareholders' Participation in Rights Offerings
We examine whether and how variations in the level of market development across regions in
China affect controlling shareholders decisions to participate in Chinese public companies rights
offerings. We find significant positive relations between measures of market development and controlling shareholders participation, as well as evidence that controlling shareholders participation
benefits minority shareholders. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that better market
development in an economy can provide de facto protection for minority shareholders by creat-
ing implicit incentives for controlling shareholders to act in the interests of minority shareholders.
Because our study holds constant minority shareholders de jure rights, these results suggest a
reputation channel exists for macro-level institutions to affect firm-level governance that is distinct
from the direct channel of explicitly granting de jure rights to minority shareholders.