The Effects of Agency Problems on the Financial Behavior, Performance, and Efficiency of German Industrial Stock Corporations
©1999
Thesis
XXX,
414 Pages
Summary
Using a catalog of seven agency problem identifier variables such as block ownership and market segment traded in, 237 German industrial stock corporations are analyzed for the time period 1986-1992. Five sectors are also analyzed separately. Agency-problem related differences in financial behavior, performance, and cost efficiency are tested for using t-tests for mean differences and logistic regressions. The cost efficiency is estimated via stochastic maximum likelihood frontier functions. Manager-controlled firms prefer free cash flows as predicted. Owners favor debt and avoid new stock issues. Contrary to theory, manager-controlled companies do not show a poorer performance than owner-controlled firms. They do, however, operate more inefficiently than firms controlled by owners.
Details
- Pages
- XXX, 414
- Publication Year
- 1999
- ISBN (Softcover)
- 9783631345740
- Language
- English
- Published
- Frankfurt/M., Berlin, Bern, New York, Paris, Wien, 1999. XXX, 414 pp., num. fig. and tab.
- Product Safety
- Peter Lang Group AG