中小股东利益保护、美国交叉上市及后续股权发行

William A. Reese, M. Weisbach
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引用次数: 922

摘要

本文考察了非美国经济增长的假设。公司在美国交叉上市是为了加强对小股东的保护。在美国有组织的交易所(纽约证券交易所或纳斯达克)交叉上市的非美国公司。公司遵守美国证券法的许多条款,并要求公司遵守美国公认会计准则。因此,它增加了管理者获取私人利益的预期成本,并使公司有义务保护小股东的利益。交叉上市数量与母国股东保护之间的预期关系是模糊的,因为管理者会同时考虑预期的私人利益和其股票的公共价值。然而,对后续股权发行、股东保护与交叉上市之间的关系有明确的预测:1)无论股东保护如何,所有交叉上市后,股权发行都会增加。2)对于来自保护薄弱国家的交叉上市,增幅应该更大。3)在美国交叉上市后,来自保护力度强的国家的公司往往在美国进行股票发行,而来自保护力度弱的国家的公司往往在美国以外进行股票发行。我们发现了支持预测1)和3)的有力证据,以及与假设2)相一致的薄弱证据。总体而言,保护股东权利的愿望似乎是一些非美国公司在美国上市的原因之一。公司在美国交叉上市。然而,这可能不是近期交叉上市大幅增加的重要决定因素,因为法律要求可能会阻止一些确实需要股本的公司在美国交叉上市
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Protection of Minority Shareholder Interests, Cross-Listings in the United States, and Subsequent Equity Offerings
This paper examines the hypothesis that non-U.S. firms cross-list in the United States to increase protection of their minority shareholders. Cross-listing on an organized exchange (NYSE or Nasdaq) in the U.S. subjects a non-U.S. firm to a number of provisions of U.S. securities law and requires the firm to conform to U.S. GAAP. It therefore increases the expected cost to managers of extracting private benefits, and commits the firm to protecting minority shareholders' interests. The expected relation between the quantity of cross-listings and shareholder protection in the home country is ambiguous, because managers will consider both expected private benefits and the public value of their shares. However, there are clear predictions about the relation between subsequent equity issues, shareholder protection and cross-listings: 1) Equity issues increase following all cross-listings, regardless of shareholder protection. 2) The increase should be larger for cross-listings from countries with weak protection. 3) Equity issues following cross-listings in the U.S. will tend to be in the U.S. for firms from countries with strong protection and outside the U.S. for firms from countries with weak protection. We find strong evidence supporting predictions 1) and 3), and weak evidence consistent with hypothesis 2). Overall, the desire to protect shareholder rights appears to be one reason why some non-U.S. firms cross-list in the United States. However, it probably is not an important determinant of the large recent increase in cross-listings, because legal requirements potentially deter a number of firms that do have a demand for equity capital from cross-listing in the U.S.
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