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<scp>Institutional Ownership Stability and Risk Taking: Evidence From the Life–Health Insurance Industry</scp>
68
Citations
53
References
2011
Year
Financial Risk ManagementFinancial ProtectionHealth Care FinanceInstitutional EconomicsCorporate Risk ManagementRisk ManagementFinancial SecurityManagementHealth FinancingInsurance RegulationsPublic HealthInsuranceHealth Insurance ReformPublic PolicyOwnership StructureHealth InsuranceCorporate GovernanceRisk TakingRisk GovernanceFinanceInstitutional OwnershipPrivate InsuranceHealth EconomicsInsurance LawStable Institutional OwnershipBusinessRisk Analysis (Business)FinancingRisk DecisionsCorporate FinanceFinancial Risk
Abstract We investigate the relationship between risk taking of life–health (LH) insurers and stability of their institutional ownership within a simultaneous equation system model. Three main results are obtained. First, stable institutional ownership of is associated with lower total risk of LH insurers, supporting the prudent‐man law hypothesis. Second, when investors are sorted in terms of stringency of the prudent‐man restrictions, their negative effect on risk holds for all, except insurance companies, as owners of LH insurers. Third, large institutional owners do not raise the riskiness of the investee‐firms, as proposed by the large shareholder hypothesis. Regulatory implications are drawn.
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