Do shareholder protection and creditor rights have distinct effects on the association between debt maturity and ownership structure?
Authors are listed in alphabetic order.
Funding information: Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada, Grant/Award Number: 435-2018-1522; Autorité des marchés financiers, Grant/Award Number: SC-2691
Abstract
This study examines the effects of the firm's ownership concentration and its institutional environment on corporate debt maturity choices. As ownership concentration and debt maturity are alternative governance mechanisms, we theorize and investigate whether their association is influenced by country-level governance factors that enhance outside monitoring by minority shareholders and debtholders. Our investigation is based on a dataset of 50,599 firm-year observations from 38 countries. We use a propensity-score matching approach and find that the effect of ownership concentration on debt maturity is conditional to country-level governance attributes. Ownership concentration has a negative effect on debt maturity in countries where both shareholder protection and creditor rights are weak. Ownership concentration, however, tends to lengthen debt maturity as protection increases, and this positive effect on the length of debt maturity is stronger in countries enhancing protection towards debtholders (instead of shareholders). We also explore other characteristics of ownership structure, such as the identity and presence of controlling shareholders. These results corroborate the view that entrenched shareholders may use debt maturity opportunistically. Our study provides new insights into the interplay between firm- and country-level governance mechanisms and a deeper understanding of cross-country differences in the association between ownership structure and debt financing.
Open Research
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT
The data that support the findings of this study are available from Bureau Van Dijk ORBIS but restrictions apply to the availability of these data, which were used under license from HEC Montréal, and so are not publicly available. Data are however available from the authors upon request. This data was retrieved from Bureau Van Dijk ORBIS: https://orbis.bvdinfo.com. Two other data sets were used and are public available. Inflations rates were collected from International Monetary Fund (IMF) data base; Retrieved from: https://www.imf.org/external/datamapper/PCPIPCH@WEO/OEMDC. Data for assessing countries' minority shareholder protection and creditor rights was collected from Professor Andrei Shleifer's publications. Retrieved from: https://scholar.harvard.edu/shleifer/publications.




