Shareholder Activism Research Spotlight
Shareholder Activism Research Spotlight
Shareholder Activism Research Spotlight
Proponents:
Opponents:
Most research finds that activists are successful in influencing companies. Their impact of on
shareholder value is uncertain.
UNION / PENSION ACTIVISM
Find:
Companies that adopt union-sponsored proposals have improved labor relations.
Stock market reaction is negative if unions are sponsor, positive if non-unions.
Directors who adopt union-sponsored proposals lose significantly more external board seats than non-
union sponsored proposals.
Find that:
Unions increase the frequency of proposals in contract expiration years.
Wage increases are higher when unions sponsor and then withdraw proposal (i.e., use as bargaining
chip).
No evidence that companies adopt good governance following union proposals; positive evidence
when other shareholders are sponsor.
Barber (2007) examines the impact of CalPERS pension fund activism on shareholder outcomes.
Finds:
Focus firms have significantly negative performance prior to CalPERS activism.
Marginal positive returns when CalPERS adds a firm to its focus list.
Long-term returns are statistically insignificant.
Geczy, Stambaugh, and Levin (2005) study the financial performance of socially responsible
investing.
Find that socially responsible mutual funds significantly underperform comparable indices (0.30%
per month).
Note that model does not take into account the non-financial utility of doing good.
Renneboog, Ter Horst, and Zhang (2008) also study the financial performance of socially
responsible investing.
Rees and Rodionova (2016) examine the impact of socially responsible activism on corporate
practices.
Find that:
Targeted companies are significantly more likely to adopt activist policies.
Adoption is negatively associated with concentration of share ownership and negatively associated with
shareholder-centric governance policies.
Brav, Jiang, Partnoy, and Thomas (2008) provide a detailed analysis of hedge fund activism.
Find that:
Initial ownership stake is 6.3%; 14% if multiple hedge funds file as one group.
Positive abnormal returns on announcement day of 2.0%; 20-day 7.2%.
Targeted firms increase payouts, operating performance (ROA), and CEO turnover.
Conclusion: hedge fund activists positively impact outcomes and stock prices.
Hedge fund activism can be viewed as a new middle ground between internal
monitoring by large shareholders and external monitoring by corporate raiders The
presence of these hedge funds and their potential for intervention exert a disciplinary
pressure on the management of public firms to make shareholder value a priority.
HEDGE FUND ACTIVISM
Klein and Zur (2009) also study the impact of hedge fund activism.
Find that:
Activist hedge funds achieve their stated objective 60% of the time.
Target firms exhibit abnormal returns of 10.2% over 60 days; 11.4% over year.
However, targets exhibit a long-term decrease in performance (ROA) and cash from operations.
Finds that the hedge fund portfolio outperforms market by 12%. However, the results are highly
sensitive to risk adjustments.
This portfolio is made up of big winners and big losers. The sets of returns
for the hedge fund portfolios have higher standard deviations than the
market returns, signaling greater volatility of returns and a higher required
rate of return.
HEDGE FUND ACTIVISM
Bebchuk, Brav, and Jiang (2015) also study the financial performance of activist hedge fund.
deHaan, Larcker, and McClure (2017) also study hedge fund performance.
Find:
Positive abnormal returns in the 21-day announcement period (5%).
No long-term positive returns on a value-weighted or aggregate basis (2-years).
Equal-weighted returns driven by firms with very small market values; acquisitions.
No long-term improvement in operating performance (ROA).
Coffee and Palia (2014) conduct a review of the research literature on hedge fund activism.
Find that:
Activists target companies with lower market valuations (Tobins Q).
Target firms earn positive abnormal average returns around the announcement.
Activists have mixed impact on long-term performance (stock price and ROA).
We find the evidence decidedly mixed on most questions (other than the short-term
stock price impact). In particular, we find the conclusions about improvements in target
operating performance that have been expressed by some to be overextended beyond
their actual data.
HEDGE FUND ACTIVISM
Gow, Shin, and Srinivasan (2016) study the impact of hedge fund activism on board turnover.
Find that:
Companies targeted by activists have higher 1-year director turnover than companies not targeted by
activists (18% vs. 12.5%).
Turnover is higher even if activists do not make board-related demands.
Activism is increases the sensitivity of director turnover to performance.
Our results suggest that activists need not even engage in, let alone win,
proxy contests to remove directors. Our results are consistent with
shareholder activism increasing board turnover and accountability for poor
performance.
HEDGE FUND ACTIVISM
Borek, Friesner, and McGurn (2017) evaluate the impact of shareholder activism on board
composition.
Finds that:
Average proxy contest costs $10.7 million.
Monitoring costs reduce activist returns by two-thirds.
Mean net activist return is close to zero; only top quartile earn high returns.
The evidence in this paper provides support for the recently failed efforts by the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission to reduce the costs of using the proxy process
[proxy access].
CONCLUSION
Research generally finds that union activism tends to promote the private interests of the union
and is not broadly beneficial to investors.
Socially responsible investors are moderately successful in changing corporate practices. There
is little evidence this improves shareholder value.
Activist hedge funds are highly successful in achieving objectives. Disclosure of investment is
associated with positive short-term abnormal returns.
The long-term impact of activist hedge funds is uncertain. Any gains, if lasting, are concentrated
in a subset of firms and largely driven by takeover activity.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Ashwini K. Agrawal. Corporate Governance Objectives of Labor Union Shareholders: Evidence from Proxy Voting. Review of Financial Studies. 2012.
Diane Del Guercio and Tracie Woidtke. Do the Interests of Labor Union and Public Pension Fund Activists Align with Other Shareholders? Evidence from the Market for
Directors. Social Science Research Network. 2014.
John G. Matsusaka, Oguzhan Ozbas, and Irene Yi. Opportunistic Proposals by Union Shareholders. Social Science Research Network. 2017.
Brad Barber. Monitoring the Monitor: Evaluating CalPERS Activism. Journal of Investing. 2007.
Christopher Charles Geczy, Robert F. Stambaugh, and David Levin. Investing in Socially Responsible Mutual Funds. Social Science Research Network. October 2005.
Luc Renneboog, Jenke Ter Horst, and Chendi Zhang. The Price of Ethics and Stakeholder Governance: The Performance of Socialy Responsible Mutual Funds. Journal of
Corporate Finance. 2008.
William Rees and Tatiana Rodionova. The Impact of Socially Responsible Investment Index on Climate Change Management and Carbon Emissions. Social Science
Research Network. 2016.
Alon Brav, Wei Jiang, Frank Partnoy, and Randall Thomas. Hedge Fund Activism, Corporate Governance, and Firm Performance. Journal of Finance. 2008.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
April Klein and Emanuel Zur. Entrepreneurial Shareholder Activism: Hedge Funds and Other Private Investors. Journal of Finance. 2009.
William W. Bratton. Hedge Funds and Governance Targets. Social Science Research Network. 2006.
Lucian A. Bebchuk, Alon Brav, and Wei Jiang. The Long-Term Effect of Hedge Fund Activism. Columbia Law Review. 2015.
John C. Coffee Jr. and Darius Palia. The Impact of Hedge Fund Activism: Evidence and Implications. Social Science Research Network. 2014.
Ed deHaan, David F. Larcker, and Charles McClure. Long-Term Economic Consequences of Hedge Fund Activist Interventions. 2017.
Ian D. Gow, Sa-Pyung Sean Shin, and Suraj Srinivasan. Consequences to Directors of Shareholder Activism. Harvard Business School Working Paper. 2016.
Andrew Borek, Zachary Friesner, and Patrick McGurn. The Impact of Shareholder Activism on Board Refreshment Trends at S&P 1500 Firms. Investor Responsibility
Research Center Institute. 2017.
Nickolay Gantchev. The Costs of Shareholder Activism: Evidence from a Sequential Decision Model. Journal of Financial Economics. 2013.