Private Matters

Jean Helwege, Frank Packer
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Abstract

Why do private firms stay private? Empirical evidence on this issue is sparse, as most private firms in the US do not report their financial results. We investigate why private status matters by taking advantage of a unique dataset of large, leveraged private firms with SEC filings. Unlike a number of other studies, we find that neither the existence of growth opportunities, nor the desire of firm founders to diversify, is a principal determinant of the decision whether or not to retain private status. Rather, the existence of private benefits of control appears to serve as the most significant incentive to stay private. Family-controlled firms have significantly lower probabilities of filing for an IPO, while a board structure that grants management relatively more autonomy lowers the probability of an IPO filing as well. Cross-sectional analysis of profitability and ex post performance suggests that while private benefits of control may encourage firms to stay private, they do not have detrimental effects on firm efficiency. In contrast, firms controlled by private equity specialists appear to place a low value on control benefits and are likely to go public as a means of cashing out.
私人问题
私营企业为什么要保持私有?关于这个问题的经验证据很少,因为美国大多数私人公司都不报告其财务业绩。我们通过利用具有美国证券交易委员会备案的大型杠杆私人公司的独特数据集来调查为什么私人状态很重要。与其他一些研究不同,我们发现,无论是增长机会的存在,还是公司创始人多元化的愿望,都不是决定是否保留私人地位的主要决定因素。相反,私人控制利益的存在似乎是保持私有的最重要动机。家族企业申请IPO的可能性明显较低,而赋予管理层相对更多自主权的董事会结构也降低了申请IPO的可能性。对盈利能力和事后绩效的横断面分析表明,虽然控制权的私人利益可能鼓励公司保持私有化,但它们对公司效率没有有害影响。相比之下,由私人股本专家控制的公司似乎对控制权利益的重视程度较低,它们可能将上市作为套现的一种手段。
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