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Ownership Structure of Family-controlled Firms in East Asia

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Title: Ownership Structure of Family-controlled Firms in East Asia


1
Ownership Structure of Family-controlled Firms in
East Asia
  • Prepared by Team D2, 30 September 2002

2
Group Members
  • Chan Wing Lan, Christine 02402531G
  • Cheung Kit Yan, Alice 02415378G
  • Lau Dan, Dana 02427943G
  • Man Oi Ling, Irene 02713161G
  • Ng Hon Yin, Alec 02730827G

3
Contents
  • What is a family-controlled firm?
  • How common are family -controlled firms in East
    Asia?
  • Characteristics of family-controlled firms in
    East Asia
  • Advantages and disadvantages

4
What is a family-controlled firm ?
  • Suehiro (1993) the family business can be
    thought of as a form of enterprise in which
    both ownership and management are controlled by a
    family group, either nuclear or extended, and the
    fruits of which remain inside that group, being
    distributed in some way among its members.
  • Berle and Means (1932) more than 20 of the
    voting rights is said to have an ultimate owner.

5
Voting Rights Vs Cash-flow Rights
  • In all East Asian countries, control is enhanced
    through pyramid structures, and cross-holdings
    among firms.
  • Voting right Control
  • Cash-flow right Ownership
  • Voting rights gt Cash-flow rights
  • Why? Indirect voting rights exist !

6
How Common are family-controlled firms in East
Asia?
  • A single family controls 16.6 17.1 of the
    total value of listed corporate assets in
    Indonesia the Philippines respectively

7
Characteristics of family-controlled firms in
East Asia
  • Voting rights exceed cash flow rights
  • Rare separation of management from ownership
    control
  • Concentration of control

8
Characteristic Voting rights exceed cash flow
rights
  • Definitions
  • Voting rights ? Control
  • Cash flow rights ? Ownership
  • Voting rights exceed ? Uses of deviation from
    one- cash flow rights share-one vote,
    pyramiding schemes, and cross-
    holdings

9
Voting rights exceed cash flow rights
  • Example 1
  • No deviations from one-share-one vote or
    cross-holdings

Lees Family
The family owns 11 of both voting cash flow
rights of Firm A
The family owns 11 of voting rights of Firm B
The family owns 2 of cash flow rights of Firm B
10
Voting rights exceed cash flow rights (Cont)
  • Example 2
  • Cross-holdings are present, there are several
    control right chains

Lees Family
11
Voting rights exceed cash flow rights (Cont)
  • The familys voting rights on Firm B will exceed
    its cash flow rights

12
Example of ownership structure of the Li
Ka-Shing family
Hong Kong Electric
Dao Hang Bank Ltd
13
Example of ownership structure of the Li
Ka-Shing family (cont)
Li Ka-Shing and family
O Ownership C Control
35 O C
Cheung Kong
34 O 40 C
Hutchison Whampoa
60 O 65 C
Cavendish International
34 O C
Hong Kong Electric
  • The family controls 34 of the vote with only
    2.5 of cash flow rights

14
Example of ownership structure of the Li
Ka-Shing family
Dao Hang Bank Ltd
15
Example of ownership structure of the Li Ka-Shing
family (cont)
Dao Hang Bank Ltd
  • The family controls 12 of the vote with only 3
    of cash flow rights

16
Characteristic Rare separation of management
from ownership control
  • Management of 60of the firms that are not widely
    held is related to the family of the controlling
    shareholder.

17
Characteristic Concentration of control
  • Control of publicly traded companies in East Asia
  • Correlation between age and the size of control
    stakes in East Asian corporations
  • Correlation of control and company size

18
Control of publicly traded companies in East Asia
(Cont)
19
Control of publicly traded companies in East
Asia
  • Some of the differences in the concentration of
    control are due to the variations in company laws
    across countries
  • Differences in min. in shareholdings for
    blocking major decision
  • Differences in min. in shareholdings to call an
    extraordinary shareholders meeting
  • Differences in level of restriction of voting
    rights at institutional investors
  • Concentration of control seems to diminish with
    the level of economic development of the country

20
Correlation between age and the size of control
stakes in East Asian corporations
21
Correlation between age and the size of control
stakes in East Asian corporations
  • Only in Japan are older firms more frequently
    widely held
  • In all other eight countries, older firms have
    more concentrated corporate control, significant
    in the Indonesian, Malaysian and Taiwanese
    samples

22
Correlation of control and company size
Country Category Family()
Japan Largest 20 Middle 50 Smallest 50 60.0 62.7 93.0
Korea Largest 20 Middle 50 Smallest 50 20.0 11.0 97.0
Hong Kong Largest 20 Middle 50 Smallest 50 72.5 66.0 57.0
23
Correlation of control and company size
  • In most countries, the share of family ownership
    increases for smaller firms. ( Only Hong Kong is
    the exceptional case)
  • The majority of large and medium size Japanese
    and Korean corporations are widely held. All
    bottom 50 companies have ultimate owners
  • Much less variation of control structures across
    company size in the Philippines

24
Characteristic Concentration of control
  • Concentration of control is determined by
  • Development of the country- concentration of
    control diminishes with the level of development
  • Age of company - older firms are more likely
    family controlled
  • Size of company - the share of family ownership
    increases for smaller firms

25
Advantages
  • Reduce Principal Agent Problem
  • Principal/Agent Theory
  • Divergent interests between owners (Principals)
    and managers (Agents)
  • The managers may not act for the interests of the
    owners
  • Increase monitoring cost (a source of transaction
    cost)
  • Induce moral hazard
  • Family relationships among owners-managers
  • Reduce Agency cost (Fama and Jensen, 1985)
  • Family membership served to monitor discipline
    managers
  • The asymmetry of information between owners and
    managers is not usually very serious
  • Lower monitoring cost
  • Less moral hazard and more efficient
  • Less opportunism within family group
  • Reduce transaction cost

26
Advantages
  • Enhance profit-maximization
  • Profit-maximization
  • Interest of owner Interest of management
  • (assuming that they prefer more profits)
  • Loyal family-tied managers
  • Strong leadership cohesive management team
  • Reduce managerial discretion
  • If owner and managers are profit-maximizers
  • Firm will maximize profits

27
Advantages
  • Make fast decisions and actions
  • Management can deal with fewer committees, layers
    of bureaucracy other constituencies
  • Easier communication
  • e.g. hold a family council about the decision,
    relatively easier to accomplish
    compared with general
    shareholder meetings
  • Fewer layers ? Higher flexibility ? Reduce
    transaction cost
  • CEO dominative / paternalism
  • ? Centralized decision making

28
Advantages
  • Ability to make long-term decision
  • Patient Capital
  • Allow management to consider more strategic
    options
  • e.g. Invest in a market / product / service
  • (may not be profitable for 5-10 years,
    but can be immensely beneficial to the
    firm)
  • Extensive expertise
  • Family members have extensive expertise regarding
    to the firm since they have known it in early
    childhood
  • (Kets de Vries 1993)

29
Advantages
  • Take advantage of cross-shareholding pyramidal
    structure
  • e.g. HK Electric buy things with an expensive
    price from Cheung Kong and it results in
    the big profits shown in the annual report
    of Cheung Kong

30
Disadvantages
31
Disadvantages
  • Crony Capitalism
  • Small number of families effectively control the
    economy, giving them incentives and ability to
    lobby government for preferential
    treatments e.g. trade barriers,
    non-market based financing
  • Example (1)
  • Imelda Macros, widow of the former Philippine
    president Ferdinand Marcos said We practically
    own everything in the Philippine from
    electricity, telecommunications, airlines,
    banking, beer and tobacco, newspaper publishing,
    television stations, shipping, oil and mining,
    hotels and beach resorts, down to coconut
    milling, small farms, real estate and insurance

32
Disadvantages
  • Example (2)
  • Non prosecution of Sally Aw Sian in 1998,
    former Sing Tao Group chairperson, for
    sales figures forgery of Hong
    Kong Standard due to close connection with the
    Mainland and being a friend of Tung
    Chee-hwa
  • Conglomerate expansion leads to conflict between
    private and public interests
  • Vicious Cycle further concentration of corporate
    control and increased dependence on politicians
    and tycoons

33
Disadvantages
  • Expropriation of Minority Shareholders
  • Expropriation arises when
  • Insiders set unfair terms for intra-group sales
    of goods and services e.g. set
    exorbitant prices to gain profit
    out of private interests
  • Mediocre family members appointed as managers
  • High voting right, low cash flow right ? wrong
    investment decisions causing disastrous loss to
    minority shareholders.

34
Disadvantages
  • Others
  • Succession problem
  • Limiting contribution by non-family managers
    which leads to low motivation or shoe-shine
    problem

35
  • Thank You!

36
Reference
  • Baskin, O.W. Trust as a Competitive Advantage
    Why family firms have an edge in the global
    marketplace Online Available
    http//gbr.pepperdine.edu/012/family.html 2001
  • Claessens, S., Djankov, S. and Lang, L.H.P.,
    2000, The Separationn of Ownership and Control
    in East Asian Corporation. Journal of Financial
    Economics 58,pp. 81 112
  • Davies, H. and Lam, P.L. Managerial Economics, An
    Analysis of Business Issues. Financial Times
    Prentice Hall.
  • Fama, E.F. and Jensen, M.C., 1985.
    Organizational forms and investment decisions.
    Journsl of Finsncisl Economics, 14, pp. 101-109
  • Kets de Vries, M.F.R., 1993. The Dynamics of
    family controlled firms The good and bad news
    Organizational Dynamics, 21,3,pp. 59 71
  • Suehiro Akira (1993), Family Business Reassessed
    Corporate Structure Late Starting
    Industrialization in Thailand, The Developing
    Economics, 31- 4, pp. 378-407
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