ABSTRACT

Institutional shareholder participation has long been considered as vital to good corporate governance yet its potential does not seem to have been realized. The recent banking crisis exposed the passivity of some institutional shareholders, many of whom appear to have chosen to sell their stakes in the banks rather than intervene or challenge the board when they realized the strategies followed by the banks were excessively risky. Institutional shareholders’ role to scrutinize and monitor the decisions of boards and executive management in the banking sector in the UK is considered by many to be a failure, resulting in the phenomenon of ‘ownerless corporations’, as described by Lord Myners. In China, despite the fast rising of institutional investment in the securities market, institutional shareholders have not yet played a contributory role in monitoring corporate managers in listed companies.

Drawing on empirical evidence this book seeks to systematically analyses institutional shareholders’ incentives to activism to explain when and why shareholder activism will occur. The book puts forward a model which explains the factors that determine institutional shareholders’ propensity for activism. The model both elaborates the collective benefits of activism as a means of achieving managerial accountability asks whether and when shareholder activism is rational for any individual shareholder. The book then goes to on to apply these finding to both the UK and China in order to explain the varying levels of shareholder activism in each jurisdiction. The book is the first to take an in-depth look at institutional share-holder activism in China providing prescriptions to promote greater shareholder engagement and exploring the potential it holds for improving corporate governance in the region.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

part I|30 pages

A model for shareholder activism

part II|33 pages

The framework of corporate governance in the UK and China

part III|45 pages

Institutional investment in the UK and China

part IV|110 pages

Developing and applying the model for institutional investor activism in the UK and China

chapter 6|19 pages

UK institutional shareholder activism

Empirical evidence

chapter 8|27 pages

Chinese institutional shareholder activism

Empirical evidence

chapter 9|30 pages

Application of the model in China

part V|40 pages

Comparisons and (modest) prescriptions for reform

chapter 10|29 pages

The way forward in China

Some implications from UK experience

chapter V|8 pages

Conclusion