The effect of shareholder activism on bondholders and stockholders
The effect of shareholder activism on bondholders and stockholders
We examine the wealth effect of shareholder activism on bond returns, as well as the extent to which wealth is transferred from bondholders to shareholders, which we refer to as the wealth-transfer effect. Our activist dataset includes both hedge funds and other large shareholders. Our bond dataset covers both investment-grade and speculative-grade bonds, and extends beyond the 2007-2009 financial crisis period. We find that activists’ demands cause a significant decline in bond returns, and affect long-term bonds the most. There exists a strong association between the bond price declines and dividend increases following the activists’ demands, with dividends acting as a proxy for the transfer of wealth from bondholders to shareholders. The wealth transfer affects long-term and lower rated bonds more significantly. We find an inverse association between these bond returns and stock returns at firms targeted by activists.
activism, bondholders, dividends, maturity, shareholders
Jory, Surendranath
2624eb24-850a-48f6-b3c6-c96749b87322
Ngo, Thanh
852ea7b9-fd74-4a39-9281-87626e50886b
Susnjara, Jurica
c2d0b40b-0df0-4a7b-a9a6-0872a631d5c9
Jory, Surendranath
2624eb24-850a-48f6-b3c6-c96749b87322
Ngo, Thanh
852ea7b9-fd74-4a39-9281-87626e50886b
Susnjara, Jurica
c2d0b40b-0df0-4a7b-a9a6-0872a631d5c9
Jory, Surendranath, Ngo, Thanh and Susnjara, Jurica
(2017)
The effect of shareholder activism on bondholders and stockholders.
Quarterly Review of Economics and Finance.
(doi:10.1016/j.qref.2017.04.004).
Abstract
We examine the wealth effect of shareholder activism on bond returns, as well as the extent to which wealth is transferred from bondholders to shareholders, which we refer to as the wealth-transfer effect. Our activist dataset includes both hedge funds and other large shareholders. Our bond dataset covers both investment-grade and speculative-grade bonds, and extends beyond the 2007-2009 financial crisis period. We find that activists’ demands cause a significant decline in bond returns, and affect long-term bonds the most. There exists a strong association between the bond price declines and dividend increases following the activists’ demands, with dividends acting as a proxy for the transfer of wealth from bondholders to shareholders. The wealth transfer affects long-term and lower rated bonds more significantly. We find an inverse association between these bond returns and stock returns at firms targeted by activists.
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Accepted/In Press date: 7 April 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 18 April 2017
Keywords:
activism, bondholders, dividends, maturity, shareholders
Organisations:
Banking & Finance, Southampton Business School
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 408752
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/408752
ISSN: 1062-9769
PURE UUID: 3f029390-f712-4462-a620-56bac8927662
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Date deposited: 27 May 2017 04:03
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 05:18
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Author:
Thanh Ngo
Author:
Jurica Susnjara
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