The present paper proposes a new measure of the voting right, the Relative Vote Segment, which incorporates dividend privileges into the inferior class of shares. We test and compare it against the standard Relative Price Difference and the Nenova (2003) measure using 1998– 2008 data from Italy, a country where dividend privileges are relevant. Results show that when dividend privileges are considered, the average voting right equals +35.63%, while its estimated value corresponds to a significantly lower +20.35% and +1.29% with the Relative Price Difference and the Nenova (2003) measure, respectively. Negative values of voting rights drop significantly with our methodology. Results become even more clear-cut when we clean the sample of possible measurement errors. As far as the determinants of the voting premium are concerned, the choice of the measure does not appear to have a significant impact, as long as the dividend differences are controlled for.
Croci, E., Bigelli, M., Dividend Privileges, Measurement Errors, and the Value of Voting Rights: Evidence from Italy, <<JOURNAL OF EMPIRICAL FINANCE>>, 2013; 24 (N/A): 94-107. [doi:10.1016/j.jempfin.2013.09.002] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/51376]
Dividend Privileges, Measurement Errors, and the Value of Voting Rights: Evidence from Italy
Croci, Ettore;Bigelli, Marco
2013
Abstract
The present paper proposes a new measure of the voting right, the Relative Vote Segment, which incorporates dividend privileges into the inferior class of shares. We test and compare it against the standard Relative Price Difference and the Nenova (2003) measure using 1998– 2008 data from Italy, a country where dividend privileges are relevant. Results show that when dividend privileges are considered, the average voting right equals +35.63%, while its estimated value corresponds to a significantly lower +20.35% and +1.29% with the Relative Price Difference and the Nenova (2003) measure, respectively. Negative values of voting rights drop significantly with our methodology. Results become even more clear-cut when we clean the sample of possible measurement errors. As far as the determinants of the voting premium are concerned, the choice of the measure does not appear to have a significant impact, as long as the dividend differences are controlled for.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.