Passive Investing and Corporate Governance: A Law and Economics Analysis

D. S. Lund
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Abstract

An important debate in corporate governance is whether passive funds — a term that includes ETFs and index funds — have incentives to provide adequate oversight of their portfolio companies. One set of scholars contends that agency cost problems likely thwart passive fund stewardship for several reasons. First, passive funds suffer from an acute collective action problem because any investment in improving the performance of a company will benefit all funds that track the index equally, while only the activist fund will incur the costs. Indeed, these scholars point out that investments in stewardship are particularly costly for the passive fund portfolio manager, which lacks the firm-specific information necessary to participate in governance in a beneficial way. Second, passive fund portfolio managers may have inadequate incentives to invest in beneficial stewardship because they capture only a small fraction of the gains. And third and finally, passive fund portfolio managers have ample incentive to be excessively deferential to management, who are often their clients. These scholars conclude that because of these flawed incentives, the rise of passive investing portends economic harm and justifies wide-ranging regulatory intervention — from incentivizing passive fund stewardship, to restricting passive fund voting rights. Another set of scholars contend that passive fund stewardship is likely to be as good as, if not better than, stewardship by other investors. They contend that passive funds compete for investor dollars not just against other passive funds, but also against actively managed mutual funds. This competition provides an incentive for passive funds to invest in stewardship that will attract asset inflows. In addition, the large size of the institutional investors that offer passive funds affords them economies of scale and scope in stewardship. And because these large institutional investors have massive stakes in portfolio companies, capturing even a small fraction of any gain will substantially increase their take home pay, providing an incentive to be engaged for a small number of material votes that occur each year. These scholars contend — in the words of Adam Smith, and later, Jack Bogle — that the invisible hand is all that is needed. This is a chapter from the forthcoming Encyclopedia of Law and Economics (Adam Badawi, ed., 2nd edition 2020).
被动投资与公司治理:法律与经济学分析
公司治理领域的一个重要争论是,被动型基金(包括etf和指数基金)是否有动力对其投资组合公司进行充分监督。一组学者认为,代理成本问题可能会阻碍被动基金管理,原因有几个。首先,被动型基金存在严重的集体行为问题,因为任何改善一家公司业绩的投资,都会让所有追踪该指数的基金平均受益,而只有维权基金会承担成本。事实上,这些学者指出,被动基金组合经理在管理方面的投资成本特别高,因为他们缺乏以有益的方式参与治理所必需的公司特定信息。其次,被动基金投资组合经理可能没有足够的动力投资于有益的管理,因为他们只获得了收益的一小部分。第三,也是最后一点,被动型基金投资组合经理有足够的动机对管理层过分恭敬,而管理层往往是他们的客户。这些学者得出结论,由于这些有缺陷的激励措施,被动投资的兴起预示着经济危害,并为广泛的监管干预提供了理由——从激励被动基金管理到限制被动基金投票权。另一组学者认为,被动基金管理可能与其他投资者的管理一样好,如果不是更好的话。他们认为,被动型基金不仅要与其他被动型基金竞争投资者的资金,还要与积极管理的共同基金竞争。这种竞争为被动基金提供了一种激励,促使它们投资于将吸引资产流入的管理业务。此外,提供被动型基金的机构投资者规模庞大,使它们在管理方面具有规模经济和范围经济。而且,由于这些大型机构投资者在投资组合公司中持有大量股份,即使获得任何收益的一小部分,也会大大增加他们的实得工资,从而激励他们参与每年发生的少量实质性投票。这些学者认为——用亚当·斯密和后来的杰克·博格尔的话来说——看不见的手就是所有需要的。这是即将出版的法律和经济学百科全书的一章(亚当巴达维,编辑,2020年第二版)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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