Conference item
Board structure, mergers, and shareholder wealth: a study of the mutual fund industry
- Abstract:
- We study mutual fund mergers between 1999 and 2001 to understand the role and effectiveness of fund boards. Some fund mergers—typically across-family mergers—benefit target shareholders but are costly to target fund directors. Such mergers are more likely when funds underperform and their boards have a larger percentage of independent trustees, suggesting that more-independent boards tolerate less underperformance before initiating across-family mergers. This effect is most pronounced when all of the fund's directors are independent, not the 75% level of independence required by the SEC. Higher-paid target fund boards are less likely to approve across-family mergers that cause substantial reductions in their compensation.
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Authors
- Publication date:
- 2004-01-01
- UUID:
-
uuid:f845044d-1ad1-4aa7-b1e2-5c7e52da5af1
- Local pid:
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oai:eureka.sbs.ox.ac.uk:942
- Deposit date:
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2011-10-28
- ARK identifier:
Terms of use
- Copyright date:
- 2004
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