{"title":"Estimating the Competitive Effects of Common Ownership","authors":"Jacob P. Gramlich, Serafin Grundl","doi":"10.17016/FEDS.2017.029r1","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"If managers maximize the payoffs of their shareholders rather than firm profits, then it may be anticompetitive for a shareholder to own competing firms. This is because a manager?s objective function may place weight on profits of competitors who are held by the same shareholder. Recent research found evidence that common ownership by diversified institutional investors is anticompetitive by showing that prices in the airline and banking industries are related to generalized versions of the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) that account for common ownership. In this paper we propose an alternative approach to estimating the competitive effects of common ownership that relates prices and quantities directly to the weights that such managers may be placing on the profits of their rivals. We argue that this approach has several advantages. First, the approach does not inherit the endogeneity problems of HHI regressions, which arise because HHI measures are functions of quantities. Second, because we treat quantities as outcomes we can look for competitive effects of common ownership on both prices and quantities. Third, while concentration measures vary only at the market-time level, the profit weights also vary at the firm level, which allows us to control for a richer set of unobservables. We apply this approach to data from the banking industry. Our empirical findings are mixed, though they?re preliminary as we investigate irregularities in ownership data (Anderson and Brockman (2016)). The sign of the estimated effect is sensitive to the specification. Economically, estimated effects on prices and quantities are fairly small.","PeriodicalId":153113,"journal":{"name":"Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Research Series","volume":"22 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2017-04-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"24","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System Research Series","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.17016/FEDS.2017.029r1","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 24
Abstract
If managers maximize the payoffs of their shareholders rather than firm profits, then it may be anticompetitive for a shareholder to own competing firms. This is because a manager?s objective function may place weight on profits of competitors who are held by the same shareholder. Recent research found evidence that common ownership by diversified institutional investors is anticompetitive by showing that prices in the airline and banking industries are related to generalized versions of the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) that account for common ownership. In this paper we propose an alternative approach to estimating the competitive effects of common ownership that relates prices and quantities directly to the weights that such managers may be placing on the profits of their rivals. We argue that this approach has several advantages. First, the approach does not inherit the endogeneity problems of HHI regressions, which arise because HHI measures are functions of quantities. Second, because we treat quantities as outcomes we can look for competitive effects of common ownership on both prices and quantities. Third, while concentration measures vary only at the market-time level, the profit weights also vary at the firm level, which allows us to control for a richer set of unobservables. We apply this approach to data from the banking industry. Our empirical findings are mixed, though they?re preliminary as we investigate irregularities in ownership data (Anderson and Brockman (2016)). The sign of the estimated effect is sensitive to the specification. Economically, estimated effects on prices and quantities are fairly small.
如果管理者最大限度地提高股东的回报,而不是公司的利润,那么股东拥有竞争对手的公司可能是反竞争的。这是因为经理吗?S目标函数可能会对由同一股东持有的竞争对手的利润施加权重。最近的研究发现,多元化机构投资者的共同所有权是反竞争的,证据表明,航空业和银行业的价格与考虑共同所有权的赫芬达尔-赫希曼指数(HHI)的广义版本相关。在本文中,我们提出了一种替代方法来估计共同所有权的竞争效应,这种方法将价格和数量直接与这些管理者可能对其竞争对手的利润施加的权重联系起来。我们认为这种方法有几个优点。首先,该方法不继承HHI回归的内生性问题,这是因为HHI测量是数量的函数。其次,由于我们将数量视为结果,我们可以寻找共同所有权对价格和数量的竞争影响。第三,虽然集中度指标仅在市场时间水平上有所不同,但利润权重在公司水平上也有所不同,这使我们能够控制更丰富的不可观察因素。我们将这种方法应用于银行业的数据。我们的实证研究结果喜忧参半。我们初步调查了所有权数据中的违规行为(Anderson and Brockman(2016))。估计效果的符号对规格很敏感。从经济角度看,估计对价格和数量的影响相当小。