Abstract:
This dissertation studies the impact of corporate ownership structure on dividend payout and
firm performance. The dissertation ties these variables to test whether policy intervention with
respect to blockholding and higher managerial ownership is required in Pakistan. This
dissertation develops and tests two main hypotheses about insiders’ ownership in listed firms.
The first hypothesis is related to finding evidence of expropriation of minority shareholders by
insiders whereas the second hypothesis is related to quantification of the expropriation effects on
firm value.
In the first part, this dissertation posits that the relevance and indeed the assumptions of the
dividends cost minimization model ought to be restricted to those countries where shareholders
rights are well protected. Alternatively, this study proposes an “investor power” hypothesis,
which is closely akin to the La Porta et al.’s (2000) “outcome hypothesis”. The investor power
hypothesis states that the determining factor of dividends payout in a weak legal system is not
the minimization of agency costs; instead it is the presence of certain powerful outside investors
who can force firms to pay out dividends. Using two variants of the dividends cost minimization
model and a modified version of the dividends partial adjustment model on a data set for 183
Pakistani listed firms, the empirical results partially support the investor power hypothesis.
Results of the mean-comparison tests as well as the regression models show that dividend-payout
ratio decreases with the ownership percentage of individual shareholders and the incumbent
managers. The empirical results indicate that there is only weak evidence that institutional
investors can force managers to pay dividends. Among the other variables, dividend payout ratio
increases with the size of a firm and ownership percentage of associated companies, and
decreases with financial leverage, coefficient of variation of net income, and growth
opportunities.
In the second part, the dissertation hypothesizes that the market places expropriation premium on
the stocks of the firms where large insiders are present. In addition to poor market performance,
such firms are expected to show poor accounting performance due to various forms of
expropriations. These hypotheses are tested with the help of OLS (ordinary least square) and
2SLS (two-stage least square) regressions while controlling for other explanatory variables that
have been identified in the literature. The results indicate that both the market- and accounting-
based measures of performance are negatively related to the ownership percentage of incumbent
managers. Among the control variables, Tobin’s Q increases with growth opportunities and
tangibility of assets, whereas it decreases with firm size, market risk, firm-specific risk, and
ownership percentage of institutional shareholders.