November 16, 2022

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Corporate duty waivers limit organic company growth and innovation, with R&D investment falling by nearly one fifth

Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

Research co-authored by Bayes Business School (formerly Cass) shows that larger public companies suffer from loss of innovation and lower share price value when managers are permitted to make decisions in their own self-interest rather than that of the organization.

The study, by Anh Tran, Professor of Finance and Academic Director in the Mergers and Acquisitions Research Center (MARC) at Bayes, Professor Eliezer Fich, Drexel University and Professor Jarrad Harford, University of Washington, examined the effects of waiving fiduciary duties—effectively the agreement that management makes decisions to benefit an organization rather than itself—in the United States following gradual relaxations in state law.

Agency conflicts arise when managers and shareholder interests diverge, most commonly in the event of managers accepting contracts for extra remuneration or to further their own careers, or through a "corporate opportunity waiver." As the study suggests, these conflicts become more problematic in larger corporations where there is greater distance between shareholders and decision makers.

Key findings of the research include:

Firm-level data to calculate R&D activity and quality of innovation used a merged dataset between CRSP and Computsat for a sample of 76,558 firm-year observations for 9,692 unique U.S. firms from 1996 to 2017.

Inventor-level analysis was also carried out to determine "inventor mobility" and "stayer productivity" in line with new powers of flexibility given to management in the event of a corporate waiver. Data for this was provided by USPTO's PatentViews database and previous research from Kogan et al (2017), which yielded almost 800,000 unique inventors employed in the United States between 1996 and 2018—with a resulting sample of over six million inventor-employer-year observations.

Professor Tran said the study proved the value of reducing agency conflicts and giving managers and innovators enough license to further their own interests without wishing to look elsewhere.

"Directors and managers of public corporations in the U.K. and across the world have fiduciary duties towards their firm's shareholders," Professor Tran said.

"One of these is the duty of loyalty in which managers must put their shareholders' interests ahead of their own. If such a duty is vacated, these shareholder interests become compromised, dropping the value of the firm in terms of share price and level of innovation."

In spite of the issues caused to larger organizations by corporate waiver legislation, Professor Tran said more could be done to mitigate the issue of agency conflicts.

"Providing incentives such as better pay and performance-related remuneration is just one mechanism by which larger organizations can keep their top talent to ensure organic innovation and growth," he continued.

"External mechanisms such as monitoring by institutional investors, equity analysts, and regulators have also been shown in the literature to be successful in reducing agency problems.

"Small businesses and start-ups, in contrast to large public companies, benefit from waivers of fiduciary duties because they can enjoy greater flexibility in raising capital from and private equity, while they are modeled more closely towards manger-ownership which in itself eliminates conflict between the two parties.

"Our research informs broader literature on how corporate governance and loyalty duties are critical in generating shareholder value."

"Disloyal Managers and Shareholders' Wealth" by Professor Anh Tran, Professor Eliezer Fich and Professor Jarrad Harford is published in The Review of Financial Studies.

More information: Eliezer M Fich et al, Disloyal Managers and Shareholders' Wealth, The Review of Financial Studies (2022). DOI: 10.1093/rfs/hhac070

Journal information: Review of Financial Studies

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