Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: http://hdl.handle.net/10259/8644
Título
How Do Banks and Investment Funds Affect Family Risk-Taking? Evidence from the Financial Crisis
Autor
Publicado en
Contemporary issues in banking: regulation, governance and performance, p. 255-278
Editorial
Palgrave Macmillan
Fecha de publicación
2018-07-24
ISSN
2523-336X
DOI
10.1007/978-3-319-90294-4_12
Resumen
We study the risk-return relationship for an international sample of family and nonfamily firms in the period 2007 to 2014. According to prior studies and following the Prospect theory, we obtain a nonlinear risk-return relation and a target level of profitability for family firms in order not to assume excessive level of corporate risk taking. This relation is more prominent in companies from countries with lower protection to creditors and less aversion to uncertainty. Also, we find evidence that institutional investors exert pressure on family firms to increase corporate risk taking, even when the return is lower than the target, with the negative consequence of reducing the profitability and going to bankruptcy, as it happened during the years of financial crisis. While banks, as big shareholders, reduce risk because they try to preserve their financial relationship with family firms. This conservative role is positive to the profitability of the firm for values lower than the return target.
Palabras clave
Prospect theory
Target and nonlinear risk return relation
Family firms
Institutional and cultural factors
Banks and investment fund
Materia
Economía
Economics
Versión del editor
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