Publication | Closed Access
Institutional and Legal Context in Natural Experiments: The Case of State Antitakeover Laws
262
Citations
134
References
2017
Year
Takeover ProtectionLawAntitrustAdministrative LawUnfair CompetitionLegal ContextLegal ComplianceSecurities LawAntitrust ExemptionLegal AnalyticsAntitrust PolicyLegal TheoryState Antitakeover LawsAntitrust EnforcementPublic PolicyMergers And AcquisitionsOwnership StructureLegal PhilosophyCorporate LawCoordinated EffectsAbuse Of DominanceBusinessNatural ExperimentsMerger Enforcement
ABSTRACT We argue and demonstrate empirically that a firm's institutional and legal context has first‐order effects in tests that use state antitakeover laws for identification. A priori, the size and direction of a law's effect on a firm's takeover protection depends on (i) other state antitakeover laws, (ii) preexisting firm‐level takeover defenses, and (iii) the legal regime as reflected by important court decisions. In addition, (iv) state antitakeover laws are not exogenous for many easily identifiable firms. We show that the inferences from nine prior studies related to nine different outcome variables change substantially when we include controls for these considerations.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1