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Informational efficiency and governance in restricted share settings: boosting family business leaders' financing decisions

Daniel Dupuis (Department of Finance, School of Business Administration, American University of Sharjah, Sharjah, United Arab Emirates)
Virginia Bodolica (The Said T. Khoury Chair of Leadership Studies, School of Business Administration, American University of Sharjah, Sharjah, United Arab Emirates)
Martin Spraggon (Dean of School of Business and Quality Management, Hamdan Bin Mohammed Smart University, Dubai, United Arab Emirates)

Management Decision

ISSN: 0025-1747

Article publication date: 23 March 2021

Issue publication date: 2 November 2021

422

Abstract

Purpose

Volume-based liquidity ratios suffer from potential measurement bias due to share restriction and may misrepresent actual liquidity. To address this issue, the authors develop two modified metrics, the free-float liquidity and the alternative free-float illiquidity ratios. These measures are well suited to estimate liquidity in the presence of trading constraints, as can be found in closely held/state-owned entities, IPOs/SEOs with lockup restrictions, dual-class share structures and family-owned businesses.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors modify the turnover illiquidity ratio, where the number of outstanding shares is scaled by the public free float, and use natural log transformation to normalize free-float liquidity. Our dataset is composed of daily observations for US stocks included in the S&P 500 index over the 2015–2018 period. To test the validity of free-float (il)liquidity ratios, the authors perform a correlation analysis for various liquidity metrics. To examine their empirical efficiency, the authors employ pooled OLS regression models for family firms as a subsample of liquidity-constrained entities, relying on five different identifiers of family-owned businesses.

Findings

The authors’ empirical testing indicates that the proposed free-float (il)liquidity ratios compare favorably with other volume-based methods, such as Amihud's ratio, liquidity ratio and turnover ratio. For the subsample of family organizations as a restricted-share setting, the authors report significant coefficients for our free-float measures across all the family firm identifiers used. In particular, as free-float decreases with progressive family influence, the advanced ratios capture an increase (decrease) in perceived liquidity (illiquidity) that is absent in the other benchmarks.

Originality/value

This study allows the authors to inform the ongoing debate on the management and governance of publicly listed companies with various impediments to trade. Traditional measures understate illiquidity (overstate liquidity) as the fraction of free trading shares is limited by design or circumstances. The authors’ proposed free-float metrics offer informational gains for family leaders to aid in their financing decisions and for non-family outsiders to guide their investment choice. As a constrained free float inhibits price discovery processes, the authors discuss how restricted stock issuers may alleviate the attendant negative effects on governance and information opacity.

Keywords

Citation

Dupuis, D., Bodolica, V. and Spraggon, M. (2021), "Informational efficiency and governance in restricted share settings: boosting family business leaders' financing decisions", Management Decision, Vol. 59 No. 12, pp. 2864-2890. https://doi.org/10.1108/MD-04-2020-0533

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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