{"title":"在英国、比利时和法国,授权发行股票和取消优先购买权:法律、经济和实践","authors":"Tom Vos","doi":"10.1080/14735970.2023.2244677","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACTIn this paper, I analyse the role of shareholder approval and pre-emption rights in protecting shareholders in share issuances by listed corporations in the UK, Belgium and France. In these countries, shareholder approval and pre-emption rights are in principle required for share issuances, but the general meeting can authorise the board of directors to issue shares and disapply pre-emption rights. Proxy advisors and institutional investors have adopted guidelines that signal that they strongly support pre-emption rights and shareholder approval of share issuances. However, I provide empirical evidence that these guidelines are often not followed in France and Belgium, especially for smaller corporations with high levels of insider ownership. I contrast this with the strong impact of the guidelines in the UK. I also offer explanations for these differences, as well as policy options that would give shareholders a larger say on the balance between flexibility and accountability regarding authorisations.KEYWORDS: Share issuancesequity financeauthorisationsshareholder protectionpre-emption rightsshareholder approval AcknowledgmentsThe paper is based on a part of the author's doctoral thesis at the KU Leuven, which benefited from comments by Veerle Colaert, Marieke Wyckaert, Koen Geens, Hans De Wulf, John Armour and many other colleagues and friends throughout the years. I also want to thank the participants in the 2021 Bocconi-Oxford Young Corporate Law Scholars Workshop and the 2022 conference of the German Law and Economics Association for useful comments on this paper. The data discussed in this paper was collected with the help of Theo Monnens, a student of the master in law, econ-omics and business studies at the KU Leuven. I am very grateful to Theo for all his hard work on this project.Disclosure statementThe author's current position as a visiting professor at the University of Antwerp is funded by donations from several private partners of the Jean-Pierre Blumberg Chair, including listed corporations (the topic of this paper) and lawyers that typically advise such corporations. See this link for an overview of these partners: https://www.uantwerpen.be/en/chairs/jean-pierre-blumberg/partners/. The author is also affiliated as a lawyer with Linklaters Belgium, a law firm that regularly advises listed corporations, including on the topic of this paper. None of these entities provided any comments on the topic of this paper.Notes1 See for example: Marco Ventoruzzo, ‘Issuing New Shares and Preemptive Rights: A Comparative Analysis’ [2013] Richmond Journal of Global Law & Business 517; Edward Rock and others, ‘Fundamental Changes’ in Reinier Kraakman et al. (eds), The Anatomy of Corporate Law. A Comparative and Functional Approach (OUP 2016) 180–83.2 Second Directive Council 77/91/EEC on coordination of safeguards which, for the protection of the interests of members and others, are required by Member States of companies within the meaning of the second paragraph of Article 58 of the Treaty, in respect of the formation of public limited liability companies and the maintenance and alteration of their capital, with a view to making such safeguards equivalent [1977] OJ L26/1.3 Directive European Parliament and Council 2017/1132 relating to certain aspects of company law (codification) [2017] OJ L169/46.4 See further in Section 2.5 See further in Section 3.6 See further in Section 2.7 Gur Aminadav and Elias Papaioannou, ‘Corporate Control around the World’ [2020] Journal of Finance 1191, 1205.8 Aminadav and Papaioannou (n 7).9 This is the criticism from Lund on the article by Nili and Kastiel mentioned in the previous footnote: Dorothy Lund, ‘In Search of Good Corporate Governance’ [2022] Yale Law Journal Forum 854.10 See for a discussion of the different agency problems: John Armour and others, ‘What is Corporate Law?’ in Reinier Kraakman et al. (eds), The Anatomy of Corporate Law. A Comparative and Functional Approach (OUP 2016) 2.11 Jesse Fried and Holger Spamann, ‘Cheap-stock Tunneling Around Preemptive Rights’ [2020] Journal of Financial Economics 353.12 Making this argument: Edward Rock and others, ‘Fundamental Changes’ in Reinier Kraakman et al. (eds), The Anatomy of Corporate Law. A Comparative and Functional Approach (OUP 2016) 181–82; Eilis Ferran and Look Chan Ho, Principles of Corporate Finance Law (OUP 2014) 109.13 Jesse Fried, ‘Powering Preemptive Rights with Presubscription Disclosure’ in Luca Enriques and Tobias Tröger (eds), The Law and Finance of Related Party Transactions (CUP 2019) 80, citing Edward Rock and others, ‘Fundamental Changes’ in Reinier Kraakman et al. (eds), The Anatomy of Corporate Law. A Comparative and Functional Approach (OUP 2016) 182 (‘preemptive rights […] discourage controlling shareholders from acquiring additional shares from the firm at low prices’); Simeon Djankov and others, ‘The Law and Economics of Self-Dealing’ [2008] Journal of Financial Economics 430, 454 (‘in the absence of preemptive rights, insiders may expropriate minority shareholders by offering shares to related parties, or even to themselves, at below-market prices’).14 See, for example: Marco Ventoruzzo, ‘Issuing New Shares and Preemptive Rights: A Comparative Analysis’ [2013] Richmond Journal of Global Law & Business 517, 520; Eilis Ferran and Look Chan Ho, Principles of Corporate Finance Law (OUP 2014) 107; Louise Gullifer and Jennifer Payne, Corporate Finance Law: Principles and Policy (Hart 2015) 135.15 Jesse Fried and Holger Spamann, ‘Cheap-Stock Tunneling Around Preemptive Rights’ [2020] Journal of Financial Economics 353.16 I discuss this issue in a separate article: Tom Vos, ‘The transaction structure of rights offerings in France and Belgium’, working paper on file with the author. It is also discussed in Section 6.4 of my doctoral thesis: Tom Vos, Shareholder protection in share issuances. A comparative law and economics approach (unpublished doctoral thesis KU Leuven 2021).17 Ronald J Gilson, ‘Controlling Shareholders and Corporate Governance: Complicating the Comparative Taxonomy’ [2006] Harvard Law Review 1641, 1651.18 Zohar Goshen and Assaf Hamdani, ‘Corporate Control and Idiosyncratic Vision’ [2016] Yale Law Journal 560, 560 and 566.19 Luca Enriques and Paolo Vulpin, ‘Corporate Governance Reforms in Continental Europe’ [2007] Journal of Economic Perspectives 117, 122.20 Luca Enriques and Matteo Gatti, ‘Creeping Acquisitions in Europe: Enabling Companies to be Better Safe than Sorry’ [2015] Journal of Corporate Law Studies 55, 63.21 Compare, for example, the arguments against takeover defences generally: Lucian Bebchuk, ‘The Case Against Board Veto in Corporate Takeovers’ [2002] University of Chicago Law Review 973; Paul Davies, Klaus Hopt and Wolf-Georg Ringe, ‘Control Transactions’ in Reinier Kraakman et al. (eds), The Anatomy of Corporate Law. A Comparative and Functional Approach (OUP 2016) 207; with some of the arguments against takeover defences: Martin Lipton, ‘Takeover Bids in the Target’s Boardroom’ [1979] Business Lawyer 101, 108 and 113–16; Zohar Goshen and Richard Squire, ‘Principal Costs: A New Theory for Corporate Law and Governance’ [2017] Columbia Law Review 767, 817.22 A pre-emption right is essentially an option for the minority shareholder, which only has value as long as the market price of the shares is above the issue price. See: DTI, Pre-Emption Rights: Final Report. A study by Paul Myners into the impact of shareholders’ pre-emption rights on a public company’s ability to raise new capital’ (URN 05/679, February 2005) 11.23 Michael C Jensen, ‘Agency Costs of Free Cash Flow, Corporate Finance, and Takeovers [1986] American Economic Review 323. According to Jensen, free cash flows are cash flows in excess of those required to fund all valuable projects of the corporation.24 For sources that (implicitly or explicitly) make this argument, see: Alain Couret, Le droit préferentiel de souscription de l’actionnaire (unpublished doctoral thesis, Université de Toulouse 1978) 176–77; Julian Franks, Colin Mayer and Luc Renneboog, ‘Who Disciplines Management in Poorly Performing Companies?’ [2001] Journal of Financial Intermediation 209; Eilis Ferran, ‘Legal Capital Rules and Modern Securities Markets – The Case for Reform, as Illustrated by the UK Equity Markets’ in Klaus Hopt and Eddy Wymeersch (eds), Capital Markets and Company Law (OUP 2003) 121–22; DTI, Pre-Emption Rights: Final Report. A study by Paul Myners into the impact of shareholders’ pre-emption rights on a public company’s ability to raise new capital’ (URN 05/679, February 2005) 12; Eilis Ferran and Look Chan Ho, Principles of Corporate Finance Law (OUP 2014) 106; Louise Gullifer and Jennifer Payne, Corporate Finance Law: Principles and Policy (Hart 2015) 138; Paul Davies and Sarah Worthington, Gower’s Principles of Modern Company Law (10th edn, Sweet & Maxwell 2016) 813.25 Julian Franks, Colin Mayer and Luc Renneboog, ‘Who Disciplines Management in Poorly Performing Companies?’ [2001] Journal of Financial Intermediation 209, 244 (‘managers have incentives to drop pre-emption rights to allow equity issues to be made to new shareholders at a discount to the equilibrium price, thereby diluting existing shareholder wealth. The discount would be in exchange for implicit or explicit agreements to new shareholders to leave existing management in place’).26 Bernard S Black and John C Coffee, Jr., ‘Hail Britannia? Institutional Investor Behavior under Limited Regulation’ [1994] Michigan Law Review 1997, 2037 (‘companies know that if they attempt a coercive, deep discount offer, they are likely to face a shareholder revolt at the next annual meeting, and investment bankers know that a coercive rights offering will alienate their best customers’); Julian Franks, Colin Mayer and Luc Renneboog, ‘Who Disciplines Management in Poorly Performing Companies?’ [2001] Journal of Financial Intermediation 209, 228 (‘senior management at the largest fund managers in the United Kingdom informed us that although they might intervene where there was very poor performance, in the face of management opposition, they were likely to avoid confrontation because they disliked the consequent publicity and the costs of organizing other shareholders. However, it was a different story when the poorly performing company required new financing: ‘it comes to a crunch when companies raise additional finance’ or ‘it all unpicks when a company needs money.’).27 See for such arguments, for example: John Armour and others, ‘Private Enforcement of Corporate Law: An Empirical Comparison of the United Kingdom and the United States’ [2009] Journal of Empirical Legal Studies 687; Martin Gelter, ‘Why Do Shareholder Derivative Suits Remain Rare in Continental Europe?’ [2012] Brook Journal of International Law 843; John Armour, Henry Hansmann and Reinier Kraakman, ‘Agency Problems and Legal Strategies’ in Reinier Kraakman et al. (eds), The Anatomy of Corporate Law. A Comparative and Functional Approach (OUP 2016) 41–42.28 Zohar Goshen and Richard Squire, ‘Principal Costs: A New Theory for Corporate Law and Governance’ [2017] Columbia Law Review 767.29 Noting this problem, for example: Louise Gullifer and Jennifer Payne, Corporate Finance Law: Principles and Policy (Hart 2015) 130; Eilis Ferran and Look Chan Ho, Principles of Corporate Finance Law (OUP 2014) 110–11.30 Stephen Bainbridge, ‘Director Primacy and Shareholder Disempowerment’ [2006] Harvard Law Review 1735, 1745; Frank Easterbrook and Daniel Fischel, The Economic Structure of Corporate Law (Harvard University Press 1991) 66–67; Sanford Grossman and Oliver Hart, ‘One Share – One Vote and the Market for Corporate Control’ [1988] Journal of Financial Economics 175; Bernard S Black, ‘Agents Watching Agents: The Promise of Institutional Investor Voice’ [1992] UCLA Law Review 811, 821–22; Bernard S Black, ‘Shareholder Passivity Reexamined’ [1990] Michigan Law Review 520, 526–29.31 See, for example: Edward Rock and others, ‘Fundamental changes’ in Reinier Kraakman et al. (eds), The Anatomy of Corporate Law. A Comparative and Functional Approach (OUP 2016) 182: Marco Ventoruzzo, ‘Issuing New Shares and Preemptive Rights: A Comparative Analysis’ [2013] Richmond Journal of Global Law & Business 517, 518 and 521.32 Under the EU Prospectus Regulation, rights offerings will normally constitute an offer to the public in the member states where the corporation is listed, and will therefore require a prospectus, unless one of the exemptions to the prospectus requirement applies, for example if the corporation has fewer than 150 investors who are not qualified investors or if the issuance is sufficiently small. See: Charles Howarth and Amy Waddington, ‘Private placements’ in Raj Panasar and Philip Boeckman (eds), European Securities Law (OUP 2021) 235; Marie-Laurence Tibi, ‘France’ in Raj Panasar and Philip Boeckman (eds), European Securities Law (OUP 2021) 767–68.33 Charles Cardon, ‘L’augmentation du capital par placement privé issue de l’ordonnance du 22 janvier 2009’ [2009] RTDF 45, 51–52.34 See, for example: Michael C Jensen, ‘Agency Costs of Free Cash Flow, Corporate Finance, and Takeovers [1986] American Economic Review 323, 324 (‘The control function of debt is more important in organizations that generate large cash flows but have low growth prospects, and even more important in organizations that must shrink’). See also: Richard A Brealy, Stewart C Myers and Franklin Allen, Principles of Corporate Finance (13th edn, McGraw-Hill 2020) 500.35 See, for example: Harry DeAngelo, Linda DeAngelo and René M Stulz, ‘Seasoned Equity Offerings, Market Timing, and the Corporate Lifecycle’ [2010] Journal of Financial Economics 275 (finding evidence in support of the lifecycle theory that young firms with low operating cash flows issue shares to fund investments, while more mature firms pay out dividends and fund investment internally, although the lifecycle theory cannot explain all share issuances).36 Article 7:177 Belgian Companies Code; article L225-129 French Commercial Code; section 549 and 551 of the UK Companies Act.37 Peter Böckli and others, ‘The Consequences of Brexit for Companies and Company Law’ (2016) University of Cambridge Faculty of Law Research Paper No. 22/2017 <https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2926489>.38 Article 7:177 iuncto article 7:153 Belgian Companies Code; article L225-129 iuncto L225-96 French Commercial Code.39 Section 551(8) iuncto section 282 UK Companies Act and section 571 iuncto section 283 UK Companies Act, respectively.40 This possibility has been implemented by the following provisions: section 549 and 551 UK Companies Act; articles L225-129-1 and L225-129-2 French Commercial Code; article 7:198 Belgian Companies Code.41 Stefan Grundmann, European Company Law (Intersentia 2012) 236.42 Section 570 UK Companies Act 2006; article L225-129-2, subsection 3 iuncto article L225-135 and following French Commercial Code; article 7:200, 1° Belgian Companies Code.43 Article 7:202 of the Belgian Companies Code. This provision also limits the size of the issuance to 10% of capital and requires an issue price that is at least equal to the bid price. In addition, it limits the duration of the authorization to three years.44 Article L233-32, I of the French Commercial Code.45 Article 21 of the Takeover Code limits the use of defensive measures in general (including share issuances) in response to a takeover bid. See also: article 7:201 Belgian Companies Code (prohibition for authorisations with regard to the issuance of subscription rights, shares with multiple voting rights, shares in exchange for a contribution in kind by a 10% shareholder or a new class of shares); article L225-147 French Commercial Code (with regard to shares issued in exchange for contributions in kind, with some exceptions in article L22-10-53 French Commercial Code). In the UK, the Listing Rules also require shareholder approval for certain share issuances, for example, for share issuances to related parties (LR 11) or for share issuances at a discount higher than 10% (LR 9.5.10), with exceptions for rights issues.46 Article 7:199 Belgian Companies Code; section 551(3) and (4) UK Companies Act 2006.47 Article L225-129-2 French Commercial Code (the so-called ‘délégation de competence’). The general meeting can also decide on the share issuance itself but delegate the modalities of implementation to the board of directors, a ‘délégation de pouvoir’ (article L225-129-1 iuncto article L225-129 French Commercial Code). The latter delegation is valid for five years. In practice, however, listed corporations in France always opt for a shorter, but more general authorization, as appears from the empirical research described in Section 5.2.48 Article L225-138, III French Commercial Code.49 This requirement has been implemented by the following provisions: Article 7:188 Belgian Companies Code; article L225-132 French Commercial Code; section 561 UK Companies Act.50 Article L225-132, subsection 3 French Commercial Code; article 7:189, subsection 4 Belgian Companies Code; section 561(2) UK Companies Act. However, corporations can disapply pre-emption rights and grant shareholders extra-statutory non-transferable pre-emption rights. See for France: Renaud Mortier, Opérations sur capital social (LexisNexis 2015) 236–37 and 244–47; Alain Couret and Hervé Le Nabasque, Valeurs mobilières. Augmentations de capital. Nouveau régime. Ordonnances des 25 mars et 24 juin 2004 (Editions Francis Lefebvre 2004) 122–26. See for Belgium: Marieke Wyckaert and Joris De Wolf, ‘Transacties met verbonden partijen in genoteerde vennootschappen na SRD II’ [2020] Bank en Financieel Recht 247, 257. See for the UK: Louise Gullifer and Jennifer Payne, Corporate Finance Law: Principles and Policy (Hart 2015) 136.51 See also the implementation in the following provisions: article 7:191 Belgian Companies Code; article 7:193 Belgian Companies Code; article L225-135 French Commercial Code; article L225-138 French Commercial Code; section 571(6) UK Companies Act; UK Listing Rule 13.8.2.52 Stefan Grundmann, European Company Law (Intersentia 2012) 239–40. See also: ECJ 19 November 1996, Case C-42/95 Siemens AG v. Henry Nold [1996] ECR I-06017-I (holding that member states may also grant pre-emption rights when shares are issued in exchange for a contribution in kind and that they may subject the disapplication of pre-emption rights to additional conditions).53 See, for example: article 7:193 Belgian Companies Code (voting prohibition for 10% shareholders in whose favour pre-emption rights are disapplied); article 7:200, 2° Belgian Companies Code (voting prohibition for directors who are a de facto representative of a counterparty in a non-pre-emptive share issuance); article 7:97 Belgian Companies Code (voting prohibition for directors who are ‘involved’ in a transaction with a related party, which includes non-pre-emptive share issuances to related parties); article L225-138 French Commercial Code (voting prohibition for shareholders in whose favour pre-emption rights are disapplied); UK Listing Rule 11.1.7 (voting prohibition for shareholders who participate in related party transactions, which includes non-pre-emptive share issuances to related parties).54 See for the UK: Listing Rule 9.5.10 (maximum discount of 10% for share issuances that are not a rights issue with transferable rights, unless a higher discount is specifically approved by shareholders). See for France: articles L225-136 and R22-10-32 French Commercial Code. However, for a limit of 10% of capital per year, the general meeting can authorise the board to decide on a share issuance with a higher discount (article L22-10-52, subsection 2 French Commercial Code). In addition, the 10% limit to the discount does not apply when shares are issued to one or more persons designated by name or to categories of persons sharing certain characteristics (article L225-138 French Commercial Code). This arguably allows corporations to circumvent the limit to the discount. See: Stéphane Torck, ‘Position AMF sur les offres de titres financiers par placement privé: la voie de la raison’ [2012] Droit des sociétés 168, para 3; Renaud Mortier, Opérations sur capital social (LexisNexis 2015) 252–53; Michael Loy, ‘L’augmentation de capital sans droit préférentiel de souscription par placement privé (Ordonnance n° 2009-80 du 22 janvier 2009)’ [2009] JCP E 1766, para 8. See also further in Section 5 about this possibility of circumvention.55 Explanatory Statement on the New Belgian Companies Code, Parliamentary Proceedings Chamber of Representatives (2017-2018), nr. 3119/001, 260.56 Article L225-136 iuncto article L225-138 French Commercial Code.57 The Investment Association, ‘Share Capital Management Guidelines’ (July 2016) <https://www.theia.org/sites/default/files/2019-06/20160701-SCM-Share-Capital-Management-Guidelines.pdf> (hereinafter ‘Share Capital Management Guidelines’).58 See for a more detailed discussion of the difference between rights issues and open offers: Seth Armitage, ‘Discounts in Placing Pre-renounced Shares in Rights Issues’ [2007] Journal of Business Finance & Accounting 1345; Eilis Ferran and Look Chan Ho, Principles of Corporate Finance Law (OUP 2014) 116–17 and 124–25.59 Pre-Emption Group, ‘Disapplying pre-emption rights. A statement of principles’ (2015) <https://www.frc.org.uk/medialibraries/FRC/FRC-Document-Library/Preemption%20Group/Revised-PEG-Statement-of-Principles-2015.pdf> (hereinafter ‘Pre-emption Guidelines’).60 Charles Howarth and Amy Waddington, ‘Private Placements’ in Raj Panasar and Philip Boeckman (eds), European Securities Law (OUP 2021) 236.61 Part 2A, paragraph 4 of the Pre-emption Guidelines.62 ISS, ‘Continental Europe – Proxy Voting Guidelines – Benchmark Policy Recommendations’ (12 March 2021), 17–18 <https://www.issgovernance.com/file/policy/active/emea/Europe-Voting-Guidelines.pdf>; Glass Lewis, ‘Guidelines. An Overview of the Glass Lewis Approach to Proxy Advice. France’ (2021), 18–19 <https://www.glasslewis.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/UK-Voting-Guidelines-GL.pdf?hsCtaTracking=76856133-1eee-4e4c-b972-823beec7dfa8%7Cd5c0d76d-1d22-4947-bdcf-2e91b6b21322>; Proxinvest, ‘Principes de gouvernement d’entreprise et Politique de vote 2021’ (January 2021) 65–66 <https://www.proxinvest.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Politique_de_vote_Proxinvest_2021.pdf> ; AFG, ‘Recommandations sur le gouvernement d’entreprise’ (January 2021), 7 <https://www.afg.asso.fr/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/afg-tref-gouve-210119web.pdf>.63 Blackrock Investment Stewardship, ‘Proxy voting guidelines for European, Middle Eastern, and African securities’ (January 2021), 9–10 and 22 <https://www.blackrock.com/corporate/literature/fact-sheet/blk-responsible-investment-guidelines-emea.pdf>; Vanguard Funds, ‘Summary of the Proxy Voting Policy for UK and European Portfolio Companies’ (1 December 2020), 10 <https://about.vanguard.com/investment-stewardship/portfolio-company-resources/INEUPOL_122020.pdf>; State Street Global Advisors, ‘Proxy Voting and Engagement Guidelines. Europe’ (March 2021), 6 <https://www.ssga.com/library-content/pdfs/ic/proxy-Voting-and-engagement-guidelines-europe.pdf>.64 ISS, ‘Continental Europe – Proxy Voting Guidelines – Benchmark Policy Recommendations’ (12 March 2021), 17 <https://www.issgovernance.com/file/policy/active/emea/Europe-Voting-Guidelines.pdf>; Blackrock Investment Stewardship, ‘Proxy Voting Guidelines for European, Middle Eastern, and African Securities’ (January 2021), 9–10 and 12 <https://www.blackrock.com/corporate/literature/fact-sheet/blk-responsible-investment-guidelines-emea.pdf>; Vanguard Funds, ‘Summary of the Proxy Voting Policy for UK and European Portfolio Companies’ (1 December 2020), 10, <https://about.vanguard.com/investment-stewardship/portfolio-company-resources/INEUPOL_122020.pdf>; State Street Global Advisors, ‘Proxy Voting and Engagement Guidelines. Europe’ (March 2021), 6 <https://www.ssga.com/library-content/pdfs/ic/proxy-Voting-and-engagement-guidelines-europe.pdf>65 Glass Lewis, ‘Guidelines. An Overview of the Glass Lewis Approach to Proxy Advice. Belgium’ (2021), 13 <https://www.glasslewis.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/Belgium-Voting-Guidelines-GL.pdf?hsCtaTracking=caa2141d-4296-4d70-b1b0-555f8c9109fb%7C367fa4c2-c9d8-4a10-a453-566158125328>.66 ISS, ‘Continental Europe – Proxy Voting Guidelines – Benchmark Policy Recommendations’ (12 March 2021), 27 <https://www.issgovernance.com/file/policy/active/emea/Europe-Voting-Guidelines.pdf>; Glass Lewis, ‘Guidelines. An Overview of the Glass Lewis Approach to Proxy Advice. Belgium’ (2021), 13 <https://www.glasslewis.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/Belgium-Voting-Guidelines-GL.pdf?hsCtaTracking=caa2141d-4296-4d70-b1b0-555f8c9109fb%7C367fa4c2-c9d8-4a10-a453-566158125328>; Glass Lewis, ‘Guidelines. An Overview of the Glass Lewis Approach to Proxy Advice. France’ (2021), 20–21 <https://www.glasslewis.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/UK-Voting-Guidelines-GL.pdf?hsCtaTracking=76856133-1eee-4e4c-b972-823beec7dfa8%7Cd5c0d76d-1d22-4947-bdcf-2e91b6b21322>; Proxinvest, ‘Principes de gouvernement d’entreprise et Politique de vote 2021’ (January 2021), 65–66 <https://www.proxinvest.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Politique_de_vote_Proxinvest_2021.pdf>; AFG, ‘Recommandations sur le gouvernement d’entreprise’ (January 2021), 7 <https://www.afg.asso.fr/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/afg-tref-gouve-210119web.pdf>; Blackrock Investment Stewardship, ‘Proxy Voting Guidelines for European, Middle Eastern, and African Securities’ (January 2021), 22–23 <https://www.blackrock.com/corporate/literature/fact-sheet/blk-responsible-investment-guidelines-emea.pdf>; State Street Global Advisors, ‘Proxy Voting and Engagement Guidelines. Europe’ (March 2021), 7 <https://www.ssga.com/library-content/pdfs/ic/proxy-Voting-and-engagement-guidelines-europe.pdf>67 Louise Gullifer and Jennifer Payne, Corporate Finance Law: Principles and Policy (Hart 2015) 137; Eilis Ferran and Look Chan Ho, Principles of Corporate Finance Law (OUP 2014) 125; Paul Davies and Sarah Worthington, Gower’s Principles of Modern Company Law (10th edn, Sweet & Maxwell 2016) 812 (arguing that the Pre-emption Guidelines constitute ‘a ‘strong’ default rule whose alteration creates a significant hurdle for the management of the company’.68 Proxy advisors are firms that generally offer research and voting advice to institutional shareholders. A list of proxy advisors in the UK can be found on the website of the FCA: https://www.fca.org.uk/markets/primary-markets/proxy-advisors. See for the voting guidelines: ISS, ‘United Kingdom and Ireland Proxy Voting Guidelines’ (19 November 2020), 26 <https://www.issgovernance.com/file/policy/active/emea/UK-and-Ireland-Voting-Guidelines.pdf>; Glass Lewis, ‘Guidelines. An Overview of the Glass Lewis Approach to Proxy Advice. United Kingdom’ (2021), 36–37 <https://www.glasslewis.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/UK-Voting-Guidelines-GL.pdf?hsCtaTracking=76856133-1eee-4e4c-b972-823beec7dfa8%7Cd5c0d76d-1d22-4947-bdcf-2e91b6b21322> Another proxy advisor, Minerva Analytics, does not publish voting guidelines, as its clients have bespoke voting policies, but it also takes the Pre-emption Guidelines as the starting point. E-mail conversation with Sarah Wilson (CEO of Minerva Analytics), 25 May 2021, on file with the author.69 Pre-Emption Group, ‘Monitoring Report May 2017’, 11 <https://www.frc.org.uk/medialibraries/FRC/FRC-Document-Library/Preemption%20Group/170512-PEG-monitoring-report.pdf>; Pre-Emption Group, ‘Monitoring report May 2016’, 12 <https://www.frc.org.uk/medialibraries/FRC/FRC-Document-Library/Preemption%20Group/PEG-Monitoring-Report.pdf>70 Pre-Emption Group, ‘Monitoring Report May 2017’, 3, 6 and 8 <https://www.frc.org.uk/medialibraries/FRC/FRC-Document-Library/Preemption%20Group/170512-PEG-monitoring-report.pdf>.71 For the collection of the data, I am indebted to Theo Monnens, a research assistant who worked under my supervision.72 The so-called ‘Gereglementeerde vastgoedvennootschap’ (GVV)/’sociétés immobilières réglementées’ (SIR). These corporations are governed by the Law of 12 May 2014 ‘betreffende de gereglementeerde vastgoedvennootschappen’ [concerning regulated real estate corporations’], Belgian Official Journal 30 June 2014. For example, article 26 of that law stipulates that regulated real estate corporation can only issue shares on a pre-emptive basis (although the statutory pre-emption rights may be replaced by extra-statutory pre-emption rights that are not transferable and have a shorter exercise period), except within the framework of the authorized capital for an amount of 10% of share capital per 12 months.73 The closed-end investment fund is Quest for Growth, a so-called ‘privak’/‘pricafs’, which invests in non-listed corporations and growth corporations. Such a corporation is subject to the Royal Decree of 10 July 2016 ‘met betrekking tot de alternatieve instellingen voor collectieve belegging in niet-genoteerde vennootschappen en in groeibedrijven’ [concerning alternative funds for the investment in non-listed corporations and growth corporations], Belgian Official Journal 4 August 2016. Article 7 of that decree states that a private investment corporation can, in principle, only issue shares on a pre-emptive basis (although the statutory pre-emption rights may be replaced by extra-statutory pre-emption rights that are not transferable and have a shorter exercise period).74 See on the Nyrstar restructuring: ‘Beurswaakhond vraagt Nyrstar vereffening uit te stellen’ (De Tijd, 2 June 2020).75 More specifically, I excluded the following corporations for this reason: Vallourec, Air France – KLM, Compagnie des Alpes, Technicolor and Latécoère.76 In some cases, the amount of the authorization as a percentage of share capital is not mentioned, in which case this information was obtained from other sources, such as the annual report, the universal registration document or the minutes of the general meeting.77 Of the 130 French corporations with an authorisation, 55 (42%) stipulate a lower percentage for private placements. In 34 of these corporations (62%), the lower percentage was 20% of share capital, which is the legal maximum for authorisations to issue shares through a private placement (Article L225-136 iuncto article L225-138 French Commercial Code – see above in Section 3).78 I also ran the regressions with the aggregate institutional ownership at the moment of data collection (July 2022) instead of my measure of the historical aggregate institutional ownership. This change does not materially affect the results.79 This classification was developed in the following article: Eugene F. Fama and Kenneth R. French, ‘Industry Costs of Equity’ [1997] Journal of Financial Economics 153.80 The statistical significance is stronger when fewer control variables are added to the model. The small sample makes it more difficult to detect statistically significant results when adding more control variables.81 See generally about the incentives of institutional investors to monitor their portfolio corporations: Lucian Bebchuk, Alma Cohen and Scott Hirst, ‘The Agency Problems of Institutional Investors’ [2017] Journal of Economic Perspectives 89.82 See, for example: James Stock and Mark Watson, Introduction to econometrics (Pearson 2020) 230–31. However, in all of the models, the Variance Inflation Factor (VIF) is significantly below 10, typically considered to be an indication of problematic multicollinearity.83 The database that I use, S&P Capital IQ Pro, unfortunately does not contain historical aggregates of institutional ownership, so I had to aggregate the data manually from the current largest 200 institutional investors in the corporation. However, this introduces some noise in the measurement of institutional ownership.84 Recall that the default rule is different in Belgium and in France: in Belgium, authorisations can only be used as a takeover defence if they allow this explicitly; in France, authorisations can be used as a takeover defence unless provided otherwise. See above in Section 3.85 Angrist and Pischke argue that a linear probability model (essentially an OLS regression with a binary dependent variable), as is used here, is more appropriate and easier to interpret in many circumstances than a probit model. See: Joshua Angrist and Jörn-Steffen Pischke, Mostly Harmless Econometrics: An Empiricist’s Companion (Princeton University Press 2009) 94–107. In any case, the results are very similar if a probit model is used.86 See for empirical evidence on shareholder structures: Gur Aminadav and Elias Papaioannou, ‘Corporate Control Around the World’ [2020] Journal of Finance 1191, 1205.87 Adriana De La Cruz, Alejandra Medina and Yung Tang, ‘Owners of the World’s Listed Companies’ (17 October 2019), OECD Capital Markets Series, 37 <http://www.oecd.org/corporate/Owners-of-the-Worlds-Listed-Companies.htm>.88 Yaron Nili and Kobi Kastiel, ‘The Corporate Governance Gap’ [2022] Yale Law Journal 782 (providing novel empirical evidence on various corporate governance provisions in the US for a large sample of both small and large corporations and finding that smaller corporations have not moved away from provisions that entrench insiders to the same extent as larger corporations have; Nili and Kastiel do not study authorisations to issue shares; however, as such provisions are not used in the US to discipline insiders, their explanations of the corporate governance gap remain relevant).89 Asaf Eckstein, ‘The Rise of Corporate Guidelines in the Unites States, 2005–2021: Theory and Evidence’ [2022] Indiana Law Journal (forthcoming), 7 <https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3705140#> (finding that larger corporations in the US are more likely to reference corporate governance guidelines of (associations of) institutional investors in their proxy statement).90 See for an empirical study of shareholder proposals in several countries, including Belgium and France: Viktor Verheyden, ‘When Shareholders Use Their Rights to Convene Meetings and to Submit Proposals. A Comparative and Empirical Analysis of Activism in Four EU Member States’ [2020] Tijdschrift voor Rechtspersoon en Vennootschap – Revue pratique des sociétés 975.91 See for a similar argument that more frequent votes give shareholders more power to hold managers accountable, but with regard to director elections: Lucian Bebchuk, ‘The Myth of the Shareholder Franchise’ [2007] 675 Virginia Law Review 695–96.92 Cass. com. (FR) 25 September 2012, Bulletin Joly Sociétés 2012, 847, note Renaud Mortier; Position-recommendation AMF DOC-2020-06, ‘Guide d’élaboration des prospectus et information à fournir en cas d’offre au public ou d’admission de titres financiers’ (29 April 2021), 87 <https://www.amf-france.org/sites/default/files/private/2021-04/2020-06.pdf>93 Separate resolutions are provided for by the template resolutions drafted by the Pre-Emption Group: Pre-Emption Group, ‘Template Resolutions for the Disapplication of pre-Emption Rights Complying with the Pre-Emption Group’s Statement of Principles’, 4 <https://www.frc.org.uk/medialibraries/FRC/FRC-Document-Library/Preemption%20Group/PEG-Template-resolution-for-disapplication-of-pre-emption-rights.pdf>.94 Pre-Emption Group, ‘Monitoring Report May 2017’, 4 <https://www.frc.org.uk/medialibraries/FRC/FRC-Document-Library/Preemption%20Group/170512-PEG-monitoring-report.pdf>.95 Article 7:202 of the Belgian Companies Code.96 Yaron Nili and Kobi Kastiel, ‘The Corporate Governance Gap’ [2022] Yale Law Journal 782.97 Dorothy Lund, ‘In Search of Good Corporate Governance’ [2022] Yale Law Journal Forum 854.98 This is the position taken by Dorothy Lund, at least with regard to passive institutional investors: Dorothy Lund, ‘In Search of Good Corporate Governance’ [2022] Yale Law Journal Forum 854. See also in more detail: Dorothy Lund, ‘The Case Against Passive Shareholder Voting’ [2018] Journal of Corporation Law 493.99 See for this argument: Lucian Bebchuk, Alma Cohen and Scott Hirst, ‘The Agency Problems of Institutional Investors’ [2017] 89 Journal of Economic Perspectives 102–3. See for empirical evidence: Gerald F Davis and E Han Kim, ‘Business Ties and Proxy Voting by Mutual Funds’ [2007] Journal of Financial Economics 552 (finding that fund families with more pension-related business ties to corporations vote more often with management with regard to shareholder proposals in general); Rasha Ashraf, Narayanan Jayaraman and Harley E Ryan, JR., ‘Do Pension-Related Business Ties Influence Mutual Fund Proxy Voting? Evidence from Shareholder Proposals on Executive Compensation’ [2012] Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 567 (finding that fund families with more pension-related business ties to corporations vote more often with management with regard to votes on executive compensation); Dragana Cvijanovi, Amil Dasgupta and Konstantinos E Zachariadis, ‘Ties That Bind: How Business Connections Affect Mutual Fund Activism’ [2016] Journal of Finance 2933 (providing empirical evidence in the US between 2003 and 2011 that mutual fund families with business ties to the corporation (through the management of pension plans) vote more often with management on shareholder proposals in closely contested votes); Lucian Bebchuk and Scott Hirst, ‘Index Funds and the Future of Corporate Governance: Theory, Evidence, and Policy’ [2019] Columbia Law Review 2091 (providing evidence that the three biggest index funds tend to vote with management in say-on-pay votes, much more often than more actively managed funds do and more often than proxy advisors recommend).Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by Fonds Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek.Notes on contributorsTom VosTom Vos, a researcher and visiting professor at the Jean-Pierre Blumberg Chair in corporate governance of the University of Antwerp, a voluntary scientific collaborator at the Jan Ronse Institute for Company and Financial Law of the KU Leuven and an attorney at Linklaters LLP (Belgium).","PeriodicalId":44517,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Corporate Law Studies","volume":"21 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":1.2000,"publicationDate":"2023-01-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Authorisations to issue shares and disapply pre-emption rights in the UK, Belgium and France: law, economics and practice\",\"authors\":\"Tom Vos\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/14735970.2023.2244677\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"ABSTRACTIn this paper, I analyse the role of shareholder approval and pre-emption rights in protecting shareholders in share issuances by listed corporations in the UK, Belgium and France. In these countries, shareholder approval and pre-emption rights are in principle required for share issuances, but the general meeting can authorise the board of directors to issue shares and disapply pre-emption rights. Proxy advisors and institutional investors have adopted guidelines that signal that they strongly support pre-emption rights and shareholder approval of share issuances. However, I provide empirical evidence that these guidelines are often not followed in France and Belgium, especially for smaller corporations with high levels of insider ownership. I contrast this with the strong impact of the guidelines in the UK. I also offer explanations for these differences, as well as policy options that would give shareholders a larger say on the balance between flexibility and accountability regarding authorisations.KEYWORDS: Share issuancesequity financeauthorisationsshareholder protectionpre-emption rightsshareholder approval AcknowledgmentsThe paper is based on a part of the author's doctoral thesis at the KU Leuven, which benefited from comments by Veerle Colaert, Marieke Wyckaert, Koen Geens, Hans De Wulf, John Armour and many other colleagues and friends throughout the years. I also want to thank the participants in the 2021 Bocconi-Oxford Young Corporate Law Scholars Workshop and the 2022 conference of the German Law and Economics Association for useful comments on this paper. The data discussed in this paper was collected with the help of Theo Monnens, a student of the master in law, econ-omics and business studies at the KU Leuven. I am very grateful to Theo for all his hard work on this project.Disclosure statementThe author's current position as a visiting professor at the University of Antwerp is funded by donations from several private partners of the Jean-Pierre Blumberg Chair, including listed corporations (the topic of this paper) and lawyers that typically advise such corporations. See this link for an overview of these partners: https://www.uantwerpen.be/en/chairs/jean-pierre-blumberg/partners/. The author is also affiliated as a lawyer with Linklaters Belgium, a law firm that regularly advises listed corporations, including on the topic of this paper. None of these entities provided any comments on the topic of this paper.Notes1 See for example: Marco Ventoruzzo, ‘Issuing New Shares and Preemptive Rights: A Comparative Analysis’ [2013] Richmond Journal of Global Law & Business 517; Edward Rock and others, ‘Fundamental Changes’ in Reinier Kraakman et al. (eds), The Anatomy of Corporate Law. A Comparative and Functional Approach (OUP 2016) 180–83.2 Second Directive Council 77/91/EEC on coordination of safeguards which, for the protection of the interests of members and others, are required by Member States of companies within the meaning of the second paragraph of Article 58 of the Treaty, in respect of the formation of public limited liability companies and the maintenance and alteration of their capital, with a view to making such safeguards equivalent [1977] OJ L26/1.3 Directive European Parliament and Council 2017/1132 relating to certain aspects of company law (codification) [2017] OJ L169/46.4 See further in Section 2.5 See further in Section 3.6 See further in Section 2.7 Gur Aminadav and Elias Papaioannou, ‘Corporate Control around the World’ [2020] Journal of Finance 1191, 1205.8 Aminadav and Papaioannou (n 7).9 This is the criticism from Lund on the article by Nili and Kastiel mentioned in the previous footnote: Dorothy Lund, ‘In Search of Good Corporate Governance’ [2022] Yale Law Journal Forum 854.10 See for a discussion of the different agency problems: John Armour and others, ‘What is Corporate Law?’ in Reinier Kraakman et al. (eds), The Anatomy of Corporate Law. A Comparative and Functional Approach (OUP 2016) 2.11 Jesse Fried and Holger Spamann, ‘Cheap-stock Tunneling Around Preemptive Rights’ [2020] Journal of Financial Economics 353.12 Making this argument: Edward Rock and others, ‘Fundamental Changes’ in Reinier Kraakman et al. (eds), The Anatomy of Corporate Law. A Comparative and Functional Approach (OUP 2016) 181–82; Eilis Ferran and Look Chan Ho, Principles of Corporate Finance Law (OUP 2014) 109.13 Jesse Fried, ‘Powering Preemptive Rights with Presubscription Disclosure’ in Luca Enriques and Tobias Tröger (eds), The Law and Finance of Related Party Transactions (CUP 2019) 80, citing Edward Rock and others, ‘Fundamental Changes’ in Reinier Kraakman et al. (eds), The Anatomy of Corporate Law. A Comparative and Functional Approach (OUP 2016) 182 (‘preemptive rights […] discourage controlling shareholders from acquiring additional shares from the firm at low prices’); Simeon Djankov and others, ‘The Law and Economics of Self-Dealing’ [2008] Journal of Financial Economics 430, 454 (‘in the absence of preemptive rights, insiders may expropriate minority shareholders by offering shares to related parties, or even to themselves, at below-market prices’).14 See, for example: Marco Ventoruzzo, ‘Issuing New Shares and Preemptive Rights: A Comparative Analysis’ [2013] Richmond Journal of Global Law & Business 517, 520; Eilis Ferran and Look Chan Ho, Principles of Corporate Finance Law (OUP 2014) 107; Louise Gullifer and Jennifer Payne, Corporate Finance Law: Principles and Policy (Hart 2015) 135.15 Jesse Fried and Holger Spamann, ‘Cheap-Stock Tunneling Around Preemptive Rights’ [2020] Journal of Financial Economics 353.16 I discuss this issue in a separate article: Tom Vos, ‘The transaction structure of rights offerings in France and Belgium’, working paper on file with the author. It is also discussed in Section 6.4 of my doctoral thesis: Tom Vos, Shareholder protection in share issuances. A comparative law and economics approach (unpublished doctoral thesis KU Leuven 2021).17 Ronald J Gilson, ‘Controlling Shareholders and Corporate Governance: Complicating the Comparative Taxonomy’ [2006] Harvard Law Review 1641, 1651.18 Zohar Goshen and Assaf Hamdani, ‘Corporate Control and Idiosyncratic Vision’ [2016] Yale Law Journal 560, 560 and 566.19 Luca Enriques and Paolo Vulpin, ‘Corporate Governance Reforms in Continental Europe’ [2007] Journal of Economic Perspectives 117, 122.20 Luca Enriques and Matteo Gatti, ‘Creeping Acquisitions in Europe: Enabling Companies to be Better Safe than Sorry’ [2015] Journal of Corporate Law Studies 55, 63.21 Compare, for example, the arguments against takeover defences generally: Lucian Bebchuk, ‘The Case Against Board Veto in Corporate Takeovers’ [2002] University of Chicago Law Review 973; Paul Davies, Klaus Hopt and Wolf-Georg Ringe, ‘Control Transactions’ in Reinier Kraakman et al. (eds), The Anatomy of Corporate Law. A Comparative and Functional Approach (OUP 2016) 207; with some of the arguments against takeover defences: Martin Lipton, ‘Takeover Bids in the Target’s Boardroom’ [1979] Business Lawyer 101, 108 and 113–16; Zohar Goshen and Richard Squire, ‘Principal Costs: A New Theory for Corporate Law and Governance’ [2017] Columbia Law Review 767, 817.22 A pre-emption right is essentially an option for the minority shareholder, which only has value as long as the market price of the shares is above the issue price. See: DTI, Pre-Emption Rights: Final Report. A study by Paul Myners into the impact of shareholders’ pre-emption rights on a public company’s ability to raise new capital’ (URN 05/679, February 2005) 11.23 Michael C Jensen, ‘Agency Costs of Free Cash Flow, Corporate Finance, and Takeovers [1986] American Economic Review 323. According to Jensen, free cash flows are cash flows in excess of those required to fund all valuable projects of the corporation.24 For sources that (implicitly or explicitly) make this argument, see: Alain Couret, Le droit préferentiel de souscription de l’actionnaire (unpublished doctoral thesis, Université de Toulouse 1978) 176–77; Julian Franks, Colin Mayer and Luc Renneboog, ‘Who Disciplines Management in Poorly Performing Companies?’ [2001] Journal of Financial Intermediation 209; Eilis Ferran, ‘Legal Capital Rules and Modern Securities Markets – The Case for Reform, as Illustrated by the UK Equity Markets’ in Klaus Hopt and Eddy Wymeersch (eds), Capital Markets and Company Law (OUP 2003) 121–22; DTI, Pre-Emption Rights: Final Report. A study by Paul Myners into the impact of shareholders’ pre-emption rights on a public company’s ability to raise new capital’ (URN 05/679, February 2005) 12; Eilis Ferran and Look Chan Ho, Principles of Corporate Finance Law (OUP 2014) 106; Louise Gullifer and Jennifer Payne, Corporate Finance Law: Principles and Policy (Hart 2015) 138; Paul Davies and Sarah Worthington, Gower’s Principles of Modern Company Law (10th edn, Sweet & Maxwell 2016) 813.25 Julian Franks, Colin Mayer and Luc Renneboog, ‘Who Disciplines Management in Poorly Performing Companies?’ [2001] Journal of Financial Intermediation 209, 244 (‘managers have incentives to drop pre-emption rights to allow equity issues to be made to new shareholders at a discount to the equilibrium price, thereby diluting existing shareholder wealth. The discount would be in exchange for implicit or explicit agreements to new shareholders to leave existing management in place’).26 Bernard S Black and John C Coffee, Jr., ‘Hail Britannia? Institutional Investor Behavior under Limited Regulation’ [1994] Michigan Law Review 1997, 2037 (‘companies know that if they attempt a coercive, deep discount offer, they are likely to face a shareholder revolt at the next annual meeting, and investment bankers know that a coercive rights offering will alienate their best customers’); Julian Franks, Colin Mayer and Luc Renneboog, ‘Who Disciplines Management in Poorly Performing Companies?’ [2001] Journal of Financial Intermediation 209, 228 (‘senior management at the largest fund managers in the United Kingdom informed us that although they might intervene where there was very poor performance, in the face of management opposition, they were likely to avoid confrontation because they disliked the consequent publicity and the costs of organizing other shareholders. However, it was a different story when the poorly performing company required new financing: ‘it comes to a crunch when companies raise additional finance’ or ‘it all unpicks when a company needs money.’).27 See for such arguments, for example: John Armour and others, ‘Private Enforcement of Corporate Law: An Empirical Comparison of the United Kingdom and the United States’ [2009] Journal of Empirical Legal Studies 687; Martin Gelter, ‘Why Do Shareholder Derivative Suits Remain Rare in Continental Europe?’ [2012] Brook Journal of International Law 843; John Armour, Henry Hansmann and Reinier Kraakman, ‘Agency Problems and Legal Strategies’ in Reinier Kraakman et al. (eds), The Anatomy of Corporate Law. A Comparative and Functional Approach (OUP 2016) 41–42.28 Zohar Goshen and Richard Squire, ‘Principal Costs: A New Theory for Corporate Law and Governance’ [2017] Columbia Law Review 767.29 Noting this problem, for example: Louise Gullifer and Jennifer Payne, Corporate Finance Law: Principles and Policy (Hart 2015) 130; Eilis Ferran and Look Chan Ho, Principles of Corporate Finance Law (OUP 2014) 110–11.30 Stephen Bainbridge, ‘Director Primacy and Shareholder Disempowerment’ [2006] Harvard Law Review 1735, 1745; Frank Easterbrook and Daniel Fischel, The Economic Structure of Corporate Law (Harvard University Press 1991) 66–67; Sanford Grossman and Oliver Hart, ‘One Share – One Vote and the Market for Corporate Control’ [1988] Journal of Financial Economics 175; Bernard S Black, ‘Agents Watching Agents: The Promise of Institutional Investor Voice’ [1992] UCLA Law Review 811, 821–22; Bernard S Black, ‘Shareholder Passivity Reexamined’ [1990] Michigan Law Review 520, 526–29.31 See, for example: Edward Rock and others, ‘Fundamental changes’ in Reinier Kraakman et al. (eds), The Anatomy of Corporate Law. A Comparative and Functional Approach (OUP 2016) 182: Marco Ventoruzzo, ‘Issuing New Shares and Preemptive Rights: A Comparative Analysis’ [2013] Richmond Journal of Global Law & Business 517, 518 and 521.32 Under the EU Prospectus Regulation, rights offerings will normally constitute an offer to the public in the member states where the corporation is listed, and will therefore require a prospectus, unless one of the exemptions to the prospectus requirement applies, for example if the corporation has fewer than 150 investors who are not qualified investors or if the issuance is sufficiently small. See: Charles Howarth and Amy Waddington, ‘Private placements’ in Raj Panasar and Philip Boeckman (eds), European Securities Law (OUP 2021) 235; Marie-Laurence Tibi, ‘France’ in Raj Panasar and Philip Boeckman (eds), European Securities Law (OUP 2021) 767–68.33 Charles Cardon, ‘L’augmentation du capital par placement privé issue de l’ordonnance du 22 janvier 2009’ [2009] RTDF 45, 51–52.34 See, for example: Michael C Jensen, ‘Agency Costs of Free Cash Flow, Corporate Finance, and Takeovers [1986] American Economic Review 323, 324 (‘The control function of debt is more important in organizations that generate large cash flows but have low growth prospects, and even more important in organizations that must shrink’). See also: Richard A Brealy, Stewart C Myers and Franklin Allen, Principles of Corporate Finance (13th edn, McGraw-Hill 2020) 500.35 See, for example: Harry DeAngelo, Linda DeAngelo and René M Stulz, ‘Seasoned Equity Offerings, Market Timing, and the Corporate Lifecycle’ [2010] Journal of Financial Economics 275 (finding evidence in support of the lifecycle theory that young firms with low operating cash flows issue shares to fund investments, while more mature firms pay out dividends and fund investment internally, although the lifecycle theory cannot explain all share issuances).36 Article 7:177 Belgian Companies Code; article L225-129 French Commercial Code; section 549 and 551 of the UK Companies Act.37 Peter Böckli and others, ‘The Consequences of Brexit for Companies and Company Law’ (2016) University of Cambridge Faculty of Law Research Paper No. 22/2017 <https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2926489>.38 Article 7:177 iuncto article 7:153 Belgian Companies Code; article L225-129 iuncto L225-96 French Commercial Code.39 Section 551(8) iuncto section 282 UK Companies Act and section 571 iuncto section 283 UK Companies Act, respectively.40 This possibility has been implemented by the following provisions: section 549 and 551 UK Companies Act; articles L225-129-1 and L225-129-2 French Commercial Code; article 7:198 Belgian Companies Code.41 Stefan Grundmann, European Company Law (Intersentia 2012) 236.42 Section 570 UK Companies Act 2006; article L225-129-2, subsection 3 iuncto article L225-135 and following French Commercial Code; article 7:200, 1° Belgian Companies Code.43 Article 7:202 of the Belgian Companies Code. This provision also limits the size of the issuance to 10% of capital and requires an issue price that is at least equal to the bid price. In addition, it limits the duration of the authorization to three years.44 Article L233-32, I of the French Commercial Code.45 Article 21 of the Takeover Code limits the use of defensive measures in general (including share issuances) in response to a takeover bid. See also: article 7:201 Belgian Companies Code (prohibition for authorisations with regard to the issuance of subscription rights, shares with multiple voting rights, shares in exchange for a contribution in kind by a 10% shareholder or a new class of shares); article L225-147 French Commercial Code (with regard to shares issued in exchange for contributions in kind, with some exceptions in article L22-10-53 French Commercial Code). In the UK, the Listing Rules also require shareholder approval for certain share issuances, for example, for share issuances to related parties (LR 11) or for share issuances at a discount higher than 10% (LR 9.5.10), with exceptions for rights issues.46 Article 7:199 Belgian Companies Code; section 551(3) and (4) UK Companies Act 2006.47 Article L225-129-2 French Commercial Code (the so-called ‘délégation de competence’). The general meeting can also decide on the share issuance itself but delegate the modalities of implementation to the board of directors, a ‘délégation de pouvoir’ (article L225-129-1 iuncto article L225-129 French Commercial Code). The latter delegation is valid for five years. In practice, however, listed corporations in France always opt for a shorter, but more general authorization, as appears from the empirical research described in Section 5.2.48 Article L225-138, III French Commercial Code.49 This requirement has been implemented by the following provisions: Article 7:188 Belgian Companies Code; article L225-132 French Commercial Code; section 561 UK Companies Act.50 Article L225-132, subsection 3 French Commercial Code; article 7:189, subsection 4 Belgian Companies Code; section 561(2) UK Companies Act. However, corporations can disapply pre-emption rights and grant shareholders extra-statutory non-transferable pre-emption rights. See for France: Renaud Mortier, Opérations sur capital social (LexisNexis 2015) 236–37 and 244–47; Alain Couret and Hervé Le Nabasque, Valeurs mobilières. Augmentations de capital. Nouveau régime. Ordonnances des 25 mars et 24 juin 2004 (Editions Francis Lefebvre 2004) 122–26. See for Belgium: Marieke Wyckaert and Joris De Wolf, ‘Transacties met verbonden partijen in genoteerde vennootschappen na SRD II’ [2020] Bank en Financieel Recht 247, 257. See for the UK: Louise Gullifer and Jennifer Payne, Corporate Finance Law: Principles and Policy (Hart 2015) 136.51 See also the implementation in the following provisions: article 7:191 Belgian Companies Code; article 7:193 Belgian Companies Code; article L225-135 French Commercial Code; article L225-138 French Commercial Code; section 571(6) UK Companies Act; UK Listing Rule 13.8.2.52 Stefan Grundmann, European Company Law (Intersentia 2012) 239–40. See also: ECJ 19 November 1996, Case C-42/95 Siemens AG v. Henry Nold [1996] ECR I-06017-I (holding that member states may also grant pre-emption rights when shares are issued in exchange for a contribution in kind and that they may subject the disapplication of pre-emption rights to additional conditions).53 See, for example: article 7:193 Belgian Companies Code (voting prohibition for 10% shareholders in whose favour pre-emption rights are disapplied); article 7:200, 2° Belgian Companies Code (voting prohibition for directors who are a de facto representative of a counterparty in a non-pre-emptive share issuance); article 7:97 Belgian Companies Code (voting prohibition for directors who are ‘involved’ in a transaction with a related party, which includes non-pre-emptive share issuances to related parties); article L225-138 French Commercial Code (voting prohibition for shareholders in whose favour pre-emption rights are disapplied); UK Listing Rule 11.1.7 (voting prohibition for shareholders who participate in related party transactions, which includes non-pre-emptive share issuances to related parties).54 See for the UK: Listing Rule 9.5.10 (maximum discount of 10% for share issuances that are not a rights issue with transferable rights, unless a higher discount is specifically approved by shareholders). See for France: articles L225-136 and R22-10-32 French Commercial Code. However, for a limit of 10% of capital per year, the general meeting can authorise the board to decide on a share issuance with a higher discount (article L22-10-52, subsection 2 French Commercial Code). In addition, the 10% limit to the discount does not apply when shares are issued to one or more persons designated by name or to categories of persons sharing certain characteristics (article L225-138 French Commercial Code). This arguably allows corporations to circumvent the limit to the discount. See: Stéphane Torck, ‘Position AMF sur les offres de titres financiers par placement privé: la voie de la raison’ [2012] Droit des sociétés 168, para 3; Renaud Mortier, Opérations sur capital social (LexisNexis 2015) 252–53; Michael Loy, ‘L’augmentation de capital sans droit préférentiel de souscription par placement privé (Ordonnance n° 2009-80 du 22 janvier 2009)’ [2009] JCP E 1766, para 8. See also further in Section 5 about this possibility of circumvention.55 Explanatory Statement on the New Belgian Companies Code, Parliamentary Proceedings Chamber of Representatives (2017-2018), nr. 3119/001, 260.56 Article L225-136 iuncto article L225-138 French Commercial Code.57 The Investment Association, ‘Share Capital Management Guidelines’ (July 2016) <https://www.theia.org/sites/default/files/2019-06/20160701-SCM-Share-Capital-Management-Guidelines.pdf> (hereinafter ‘Share Capital Management Guidelines’).58 See for a more detailed discussion of the difference between rights issues and open offers: Seth Armitage, ‘Discounts in Placing Pre-renounced Shares in Rights Issues’ [2007] Journal of Business Finance & Accounting 1345; Eilis Ferran and Look Chan Ho, Principles of Corporate Finance Law (OUP 2014) 116–17 and 124–25.59 Pre-Emption Group, ‘Disapplying pre-emption rights. A statement of principles’ (2015) <https://www.frc.org.uk/medialibraries/FRC/FRC-Document-Library/Preemption%20Group/Revised-PEG-Statement-of-Principles-2015.pdf> (hereinafter ‘Pre-emption Guidelines’).60 Charles Howarth and Amy Waddington, ‘Private Placements’ in Raj Panasar and Philip Boeckman (eds), European Securities Law (OUP 2021) 236.61 Part 2A, paragraph 4 of the Pre-emption Guidelines.62 ISS, ‘Continental Europe – Proxy Voting Guidelines – Benchmark Policy Recommendations’ (12 March 2021), 17–18 <https://www.issgovernance.com/file/policy/active/emea/Europe-Voting-Guidelines.pdf>; Glass Lewis, ‘Guidelines. An Overview of the Glass Lewis Approach to Proxy Advice. France’ (2021), 18–19 <https://www.glasslewis.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/UK-Voting-Guidelines-GL.pdf?hsCtaTracking=76856133-1eee-4e4c-b972-823beec7dfa8%7Cd5c0d76d-1d22-4947-bdcf-2e91b6b21322>; Proxinvest, ‘Principes de gouvernement d’entreprise et Politique de vote 2021’ (January 2021) 65–66 <https://www.proxinvest.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Politique_de_vote_Proxinvest_2021.pdf> ; AFG, ‘Recommandations sur le gouvernement d’entreprise’ (January 2021), 7 <https://www.afg.asso.fr/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/afg-tref-gouve-210119web.pdf>.63 Blackrock Investment Stewardship, ‘Proxy voting guidelines for European, Middle Eastern, and African securities’ (January 2021), 9–10 and 22 <https://www.blackrock.com/corporate/literature/fact-sheet/blk-responsible-investment-guidelines-emea.pdf>; Vanguard Funds, ‘Summary of the Proxy Voting Policy for UK and European Portfolio Companies’ (1 December 2020), 10 <https://about.vanguard.com/investment-stewardship/portfolio-company-resources/INEUPOL_122020.pdf>; State Street Global Advisors, ‘Proxy Voting and Engagement Guidelines. Europe’ (March 2021), 6 <https://www.ssga.com/library-content/pdfs/ic/proxy-Voting-and-engagement-guidelines-europe.pdf>.64 ISS, ‘Continental Europe – Proxy Voting Guidelines – Benchmark Policy Recommendations’ (12 March 2021), 17 <https://www.issgovernance.com/file/policy/active/emea/Europe-Voting-Guidelines.pdf>; Blackrock Investment Stewardship, ‘Proxy Voting Guidelines for European, Middle Eastern, and African Securities’ (January 2021), 9–10 and 12 <https://www.blackrock.com/corporate/literature/fact-sheet/blk-responsible-investment-guidelines-emea.pdf>; Vanguard Funds, ‘Summary of the Proxy Voting Policy for UK and European Portfolio Companies’ (1 December 2020), 10, <https://about.vanguard.com/investment-stewardship/portfolio-company-resources/INEUPOL_122020.pdf>; State Street Global Advisors, ‘Proxy Voting and Engagement Guidelines. Europe’ (March 2021), 6 <https://www.ssga.com/library-content/pdfs/ic/proxy-Voting-and-engagement-guidelines-europe.pdf>65 Glass Lewis, ‘Guidelines. An Overview of the Glass Lewis Approach to Proxy Advice. Belgium’ (2021), 13 <https://www.glasslewis.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/Belgium-Voting-Guidelines-GL.pdf?hsCtaTracking=caa2141d-4296-4d70-b1b0-555f8c9109fb%7C367fa4c2-c9d8-4a10-a453-566158125328>.66 ISS, ‘Continental Europe – Proxy Voting Guidelines – Benchmark Policy Recommendations’ (12 March 2021), 27 <https://www.issgovernance.com/file/policy/active/emea/Europe-Voting-Guidelines.pdf>; Glass Lewis, ‘Guidelines. An Overview of the Glass Lewis Approach to Proxy Advice. Belgium’ (2021), 13 <https://www.glasslewis.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/Belgium-Voting-Guidelines-GL.pdf?hsCtaTracking=caa2141d-4296-4d70-b1b0-555f8c9109fb%7C367fa4c2-c9d8-4a10-a453-566158125328>; Glass Lewis, ‘Guidelines. An Overview of the Glass Lewis Approach to Proxy Advice. France’ (2021), 20–21 <https://www.glasslewis.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/UK-Voting-Guidelines-GL.pdf?hsCtaTracking=76856133-1eee-4e4c-b972-823beec7dfa8%7Cd5c0d76d-1d22-4947-bdcf-2e91b6b21322>; Proxinvest, ‘Principes de gouvernement d’entreprise et Politique de vote 2021’ (January 2021), 65–66 <https://www.proxinvest.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Politique_de_vote_Proxinvest_2021.pdf>; AFG, ‘Recommandations sur le gouvernement d’entreprise’ (January 2021), 7 <https://www.afg.asso.fr/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/afg-tref-gouve-210119web.pdf>; Blackrock Investment Stewardship, ‘Proxy Voting Guidelines for European, Middle Eastern, and African Securities’ (January 2021), 22–23 <https://www.blackrock.com/corporate/literature/fact-sheet/blk-responsible-investment-guidelines-emea.pdf>; State Street Global Advisors, ‘Proxy Voting and Engagement Guidelines. Europe’ (March 2021), 7 <https://www.ssga.com/library-content/pdfs/ic/proxy-Voting-and-engagement-guidelines-europe.pdf>67 Louise Gullifer and Jennifer Payne, Corporate Finance Law: Principles and Policy (Hart 2015) 137; Eilis Ferran and Look Chan Ho, Principles of Corporate Finance Law (OUP 2014) 125; Paul Davies and Sarah Worthington, Gower’s Principles of Modern Company Law (10th edn, Sweet & Maxwell 2016) 812 (arguing that the Pre-emption Guidelines constitute ‘a ‘strong’ default rule whose alteration creates a significant hurdle for the management of the company’.68 Proxy advisors are firms that generally offer research and voting advice to institutional shareholders. A list of proxy advisors in the UK can be found on the website of the FCA: https://www.fca.org.uk/markets/primary-markets/proxy-advisors. See for the voting guidelines: ISS, ‘United Kingdom and Ireland Proxy Voting Guidelines’ (19 November 2020), 26 <https://www.issgovernance.com/file/policy/active/emea/UK-and-Ireland-Voting-Guidelines.pdf>; Glass Lewis, ‘Guidelines. An Overview of the Glass Lewis Approach to Proxy Advice. United Kingdom’ (2021), 36–37 <https://www.glasslewis.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/UK-Voting-Guidelines-GL.pdf?hsCtaTracking=76856133-1eee-4e4c-b972-823beec7dfa8%7Cd5c0d76d-1d22-4947-bdcf-2e91b6b21322> Another proxy advisor, Minerva Analytics, does not publish voting guidelines, as its clients have bespoke voting policies, but it also takes the Pre-emption Guidelines as the starting point. E-mail conversation with Sarah Wilson (CEO of Minerva Analytics), 25 May 2021, on file with the author.69 Pre-Emption Group, ‘Monitoring Report May 2017’, 11 <https://www.frc.org.uk/medialibraries/FRC/FRC-Document-Library/Preemption%20Group/170512-PEG-monitoring-report.pdf>; Pre-Emption Group, ‘Monitoring report May 2016’, 12 <https://www.frc.org.uk/medialibraries/FRC/FRC-Document-Library/Preemption%20Group/PEG-Monitoring-Report.pdf>70 Pre-Emption Group, ‘Monitoring Report May 2017’, 3, 6 and 8 <https://www.frc.org.uk/medialibraries/FRC/FRC-Document-Library/Preemption%20Group/170512-PEG-monitoring-report.pdf>.71 For the collection of the data, I am indebted to Theo Monnens, a research assistant who worked under my supervision.72 The so-called ‘Gereglementeerde vastgoedvennootschap’ (GVV)/’sociétés immobilières réglementées’ (SIR). These corporations are governed by the Law of 12 May 2014 ‘betreffende de gereglementeerde vastgoedvennootschappen’ [concerning regulated real estate corporations’], Belgian Official Journal 30 June 2014. For example, article 26 of that law stipulates that regulated real estate corporation can only issue shares on a pre-emptive basis (although the statutory pre-emption rights may be replaced by extra-statutory pre-emption rights that are not transferable and have a shorter exercise period), except within the framework of the authorized capital for an amount of 10% of share capital per 12 months.73 The closed-end investment fund is Quest for Growth, a so-called ‘privak’/‘pricafs’, which invests in non-listed corporations and growth corporations. Such a corporation is subject to the Royal Decree of 10 July 2016 ‘met betrekking tot de alternatieve instellingen voor collectieve belegging in niet-genoteerde vennootschappen en in groeibedrijven’ [concerning alternative funds for the investment in non-listed corporations and growth corporations], Belgian Official Journal 4 August 2016. Article 7 of that decree states that a private investment corporation can, in principle, only issue shares on a pre-emptive basis (although the statutory pre-emption rights may be replaced by extra-statutory pre-emption rights that are not transferable and have a shorter exercise period).74 See on the Nyrstar restructuring: ‘Beurswaakhond vraagt Nyrstar vereffening uit te stellen’ (De Tijd, 2 June 2020).75 More specifically, I excluded the following corporations for this reason: Vallourec, Air France – KLM, Compagnie des Alpes, Technicolor and Latécoère.76 In some cases, the amount of the authorization as a percentage of share capital is not mentioned, in which case this information was obtained from other sources, such as the annual report, the universal registration document or the minutes of the general meeting.77 Of the 130 French corporations with an authorisation, 55 (42%) stipulate a lower percentage for private placements. In 34 of these corporations (62%), the lower percentage was 20% of share capital, which is the legal maximum for authorisations to issue shares through a private placement (Article L225-136 iuncto article L225-138 French Commercial Code – see above in Section 3).78 I also ran the regressions with the aggregate institutional ownership at the moment of data collection (July 2022) instead of my measure of the historical aggregate institutional ownership. This change does not materially affect the results.79 This classification was developed in the following article: Eugene F. Fama and Kenneth R. French, ‘Industry Costs of Equity’ [1997] Journal of Financial Economics 153.80 The statistical significance is stronger when fewer control variables are added to the model. The small sample makes it more difficult to detect statistically significant results when adding more control variables.81 See generally about the incentives of institutional investors to monitor their portfolio corporations: Lucian Bebchuk, Alma Cohen and Scott Hirst, ‘The Agency Problems of Institutional Investors’ [2017] Journal of Economic Perspectives 89.82 See, for example: James Stock and Mark Watson, Introduction to econometrics (Pearson 2020) 230–31. However, in all of the models, the Variance Inflation Factor (VIF) is significantly below 10, typically considered to be an indication of problematic multicollinearity.83 The database that I use, S&P Capital IQ Pro, unfortunately does not contain historical aggregates of institutional ownership, so I had to aggregate the data manually from the current largest 200 institutional investors in the corporation. However, this introduces some noise in the measurement of institutional ownership.84 Recall that the default rule is different in Belgium and in France: in Belgium, authorisations can only be used as a takeover defence if they allow this explicitly; in France, authorisations can be used as a takeover defence unless provided otherwise. See above in Section 3.85 Angrist and Pischke argue that a linear probability model (essentially an OLS regression with a binary dependent variable), as is used here, is more appropriate and easier to interpret in many circumstances than a probit model. See: Joshua Angrist and Jörn-Steffen Pischke, Mostly Harmless Econometrics: An Empiricist’s Companion (Princeton University Press 2009) 94–107. In any case, the results are very similar if a probit model is used.86 See for empirical evidence on shareholder structures: Gur Aminadav and Elias Papaioannou, ‘Corporate Control Around the World’ [2020] Journal of Finance 1191, 1205.87 Adriana De La Cruz, Alejandra Medina and Yung Tang, ‘Owners of the World’s Listed Companies’ (17 October 2019), OECD Capital Markets Series, 37 <http://www.oecd.org/corporate/Owners-of-the-Worlds-Listed-Companies.htm>.88 Yaron Nili and Kobi Kastiel, ‘The Corporate Governance Gap’ [2022] Yale Law Journal 782 (providing novel empirical evidence on various corporate governance provisions in the US for a large sample of both small and large corporations and finding that smaller corporations have not moved away from provisions that entrench insiders to the same extent as larger corporations have; Nili and Kastiel do not study authorisations to issue shares; however, as such provisions are not used in the US to discipline insiders, their explanations of the corporate governance gap remain relevant).89 Asaf Eckstein, ‘The Rise of Corporate Guidelines in the Unites States, 2005–2021: Theory and Evidence’ [2022] Indiana Law Journal (forthcoming), 7 <https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3705140#> (finding that larger corporations in the US are more likely to reference corporate governance guidelines of (associations of) institutional investors in their proxy statement).90 See for an empirical study of shareholder proposals in several countries, including Belgium and France: Viktor Verheyden, ‘When Shareholders Use Their Rights to Convene Meetings and to Submit Proposals. A Comparative and Empirical Analysis of Activism in Four EU Member States’ [2020] Tijdschrift voor Rechtspersoon en Vennootschap – Revue pratique des sociétés 975.91 See for a similar argument that more frequent votes give shareholders more power to hold managers accountable, but with regard to director elections: Lucian Bebchuk, ‘The Myth of the Shareholder Franchise’ [2007] 675 Virginia Law Review 695–96.92 Cass. com. (FR) 25 September 2012, Bulletin Joly Sociétés 2012, 847, note Renaud Mortier; Position-recommendation AMF DOC-2020-06, ‘Guide d’élaboration des prospectus et information à fournir en cas d’offre au public ou d’admission de titres financiers’ (29 April 2021), 87 <https://www.amf-france.org/sites/default/files/private/2021-04/2020-06.pdf>93 Separate resolutions are provided for by the template resolutions drafted by the Pre-Emption Group: Pre-Emption Group, ‘Template Resolutions for the Disapplication of pre-Emption Rights Complying with the Pre-Emption Group’s Statement of Principles’, 4 <https://www.frc.org.uk/medialibraries/FRC/FRC-Document-Library/Preemption%20Group/PEG-Template-resolution-for-disapplication-of-pre-emption-rights.pdf>.94 Pre-Emption Group, ‘Monitoring Report May 2017’, 4 <https://www.frc.org.uk/medialibraries/FRC/FRC-Document-Library/Preemption%20Group/170512-PEG-monitoring-report.pdf>.95 Article 7:202 of the Belgian Companies Code.96 Yaron Nili and Kobi Kastiel, ‘The Corporate Governance Gap’ [2022] Yale Law Journal 782.97 Dorothy Lund, ‘In Search of Good Corporate Governance’ [2022] Yale Law Journal Forum 854.98 This is the position taken by Dorothy Lund, at least with regard to passive institutional investors: Dorothy Lund, ‘In Search of Good Corporate Governance’ [2022] Yale Law Journal Forum 854. See also in more detail: Dorothy Lund, ‘The Case Against Passive Shareholder Voting’ [2018] Journal of Corporation Law 493.99 See for this argument: Lucian Bebchuk, Alma Cohen and Scott Hirst, ‘The Agency Problems of Institutional Investors’ [2017] 89 Journal of Economic Perspectives 102–3. See for empirical evidence: Gerald F Davis and E Han Kim, ‘Business Ties and Proxy Voting by Mutual Funds’ [2007] Journal of Financial Economics 552 (finding that fund families with more pension-related business ties to corporations vote more often with management with regard to shareholder proposals in general); Rasha Ashraf, Narayanan Jayaraman and Harley E Ryan, JR., ‘Do Pension-Related Business Ties Influence Mutual Fund Proxy Voting? Evidence from Shareholder Proposals on Executive Compensation’ [2012] Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 567 (finding that fund families with more pension-related business ties to corporations vote more often with management with regard to votes on executive compensation); Dragana Cvijanovi, Amil Dasgupta and Konstantinos E Zachariadis, ‘Ties That Bind: How Business Connections Affect Mutual Fund Activism’ [2016] Journal of Finance 2933 (providing empirical evidence in the US between 2003 and 2011 that mutual fund families with business ties to the corporation (through the management of pension plans) vote more often with management on shareholder proposals in closely contested votes); Lucian Bebchuk and Scott Hirst, ‘Index Funds and the Future of Corporate Governance: Theory, Evidence, and Policy’ [2019] Columbia Law Review 2091 (providing evidence that the three biggest index funds tend to vote with management in say-on-pay votes, much more often than more actively managed funds do and more often than proxy advisors recommend).Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by Fonds Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek.Notes on contributorsTom VosTom Vos, a researcher and visiting professor at the Jean-Pierre Blumberg Chair in corporate governance of the University of Antwerp, a voluntary scientific collaborator at the Jan Ronse Institute for Company and Financial Law of the KU Leuven and an attorney at Linklaters LLP (Belgium).\",\"PeriodicalId\":44517,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Journal of Corporate Law Studies\",\"volume\":\"21 1\",\"pages\":\"0\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":1.2000,\"publicationDate\":\"2023-01-02\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Journal of Corporate Law Studies\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.1080/14735970.2023.2244677\",\"RegionNum\":4,\"RegionCategory\":\"社会学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q1\",\"JCRName\":\"LAW\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Corporate Law Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/14735970.2023.2244677","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"LAW","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
摘要本文分析了英国、比利时和法国上市公司股东批准权和优先购买权在保护股东发行股票中的作用。在这些国家,股票发行原则上需要股东批准和优先购买权,但股东大会可以授权董事会发行股票并取消优先购买权。代理顾问和机构投资者采用的指导方针表明,他们强烈支持优先购买权和股东批准股票发行。然而,我提供的经验证据表明,这些指导方针在法国和比利时往往没有得到遵守,尤其是对于内部人持股比例较高的小型企业。我将此与英国指南的强大影响进行了对比。我还为这些差异提供了解释,以及一些政策选择,这些选择将使股东在有关授权的灵活性和问责制之间取得更大的平衡。本文基于作者在鲁汶大学博士论文的一部分,并受益于多年来Veerle Colaert, Marieke Wyckaert, Koen Geens, Hans De Wulf, John Armour和许多其他同事和朋友的评论。我还要感谢2021年博科尼-牛津青年公司法学者研讨会和2022年德国法律与经济协会会议的与会者对本文提出的有益意见。本文讨论的数据是在鲁汶大学(KU Leuven)法律、经济和商业研究硕士学生西奥·莫内斯(Theo Monnens)的帮助下收集的。我非常感谢Theo为这个项目所做的一切努力。披露声明作者目前在安特卫普大学担任客座教授,其资金来自让-皮埃尔·布隆伯格主席的几个私人合作伙伴的捐赠,包括上市公司(本文的主题)和通常为这些公司提供咨询的律师。有关这些合作伙伴的概述,请参阅此链接:https://www.uantwerpen.be/en/chairs/jean-pierre-blumberg/partners/。作者也是比利时年利达律师事务所的一名律师,该律师事务所定期为上市公司提供咨询,包括本文的主题。这些实体都没有对本文的主题提供任何评论。注1参见:Marco Ventoruzzo,“新股发行与优先认购权的比较分析”[2013];Edward Rock和其他人,Reinier Kraakman等人的“根本变化”(编),公司法解剖。比较和功能方法(OUP 2016) 180-83.2第二指令理事会77/91/EEC关于协调保障措施,这些保障措施是成员国在条约第58条第2段含义内的公司要求的,涉及公共有限责任公司的成立及其资本的维持和变更,以保护成员和其他人的利益。[1977] OJ L26/1.3指令欧洲议会和理事会2017/1132关于公司法某些方面(编纂)[2017]OJ L169/46.4参见第2.5节参见第3.6节参见第2.7节Gur Aminadav和Elias Papaioannou,“全球公司控制”[2020]Journal of Finance 1191, 1205.8 Aminadav和Papaioannou (n 7).9这是Lund对之前脚注中提到的Nili和Kastiel的文章的批评:Dorothy Lund,“in Search of Good Corporate Governance”[2022]Yale Law Journal Forum 854.10参见对不同代理问题的讨论:John Armour和其他人,“什么是公司法?”Reinier Kraakman et al.(编),《公司法剖析》。2.《中国企业治理的新视角》,《中国企业治理的新视角》,《中国企业治理的新视角》,2016年第2期,《中国企业治理的新视角》(ei)。比较和功能方法(OUP 2016) 181-82;Jesse Fried,《Luca Enriques and Tobias的预先认购披露为优先认购权提供力量》Tröger(主编),《关联交易的法律与金融》(CUP 2019) 80,引用Edward Rock等人,《Reinier Kraakman et al.的“根本变化”》(主编),《公司法剖析》。 比较和功能方法(OUP 2016) 182(“优先购买权[…]阻止控股股东以低价从公司获得额外股份”);Simeon Djankov等人,“自我交易的法律和经济学”[2008]金融经济学杂志430,454(“在没有优先购买权的情况下,内部人士可能会通过向关联方,甚至以低于市场的价格向自己提供股票来征用小股东”)参见:Marco Ventoruzzo,“新股发行与优先认购权的比较分析”[2013]《财经学刊》第5卷第1期;Eilis Ferran和Look Chan Ho,《公司财务法原理》(OUP 2014) 107;Jesse Fried和Holger Spamann,“围绕优先认购权的廉价股票隧道”[2020]《金融经济学杂志》(Journal of Financial Economics) 353.16我在另一篇文章中讨论了这个问题。Tom Vos,“法国和比利时配股的交易结构”,与作者一起提交的工作论文。在我的博士论文第6.4节:Tom Vos,股票发行中的股东保护中也有讨论。17 .比较法律和经济学方法(未发表的博士论文KU Leuven 2021)Ronald J Gilson,“控股股东与公司治理:复杂的比较分类”[2006];Zohar Goshen和Assaf Hamdani,“公司控制与特殊愿景”[2016];耶鲁法学杂志560,560和566.19;Luca Enriques和Paolo Vulpin,“欧洲大陆的公司治理改革”[2007];经济展望杂志117,122.20;Luca Enriques和Matteo Gatti,“欧洲的逐渐收购;Lucian Bebchuk,“公司收购中反对董事会否决的案例”[2002],University of Chicago Law Review 973;Paul Davies, Klaus Hopt和Wolf-Georg Ringe, Reinier Kraakman等人的“控制交易”(编辑),公司法解剖。比较和功能方法(OUP 2016) 207;Martin Lipton,《目标公司董事会的收购出价》[1979]《商业律师》第101、108和113-16页;Zohar Goshen和Richard Squire,“主要成本:公司法和治理的新理论”[2017]哥伦比亚法律评论767,817.22优先购买权本质上是小股东的一种选择权,只有当股票的市场价格高于发行价时才有价值。见:DTI,优先购买权:最终报告。Paul Myners对股东优先购买权对上市公司筹集新资本能力影响的研究”(URN 05/679, 2005年2月)。Michael C Jensen,“自由现金流、公司融资和收购的代理成本”[1986]美国经济评论323。根据Jensen的说法,自由现金流是指超过公司所有有价值项目所需资金的现金流有关(或隐或明)提出这一论点的资料来源,请参阅:Alain Couret, Le droit pracferentiel de sourisde l’actionnaire(未发表的博士论文,图卢兹大学,1978年)176-77;Julian Franks, Colin Mayer和Luc Renneboog,《谁在业绩不佳的公司中规范管理?》[2001]金融中介学报(英文版);艾利斯·费兰,“法律资本规则和现代证券市场——改革的案例,由英国股票市场说明”,克劳斯·霍普和艾迪·维梅尔施(编),资本市场和公司法(OUP 2003) 121-22;优先购买权:最终报告。Paul Myners对股东优先购买权对上市公司筹集新资本能力的影响的研究(URN 05/679, 2005年2月)12;Eilis Ferran和Look Chan Ho,《公司财务法原理》(OUP 2014) 106;《公司金融法:原则与政策》(Hart 2015) 138;Paul Davies和Sarah Worthington,《高尔的现代公司法原则》(第10版,Sweet & Maxwell 2016) 813.25 Julian Franks, Colin Mayer和Luc Renneboog,《谁在表现不佳的公司中约束管理?》[2001]《金融中介杂志》(Journal of Financial Intermediation) 209, 244(“经理人有放弃优先购买权的动机,允许以低于均衡价格向新股东发行股票,从而稀释现有股东的财富。”)这一折扣将作为与新股东达成的保留现有管理层的明示或暗示协议的交换条件伯纳德·S·布莱克和小约翰·C·科菲 10(非具有可转让权利的配股发行的最高折扣为10%,除非股东特别批准更高的折扣)。参见法国商法典第L225-136条和R22-10-32条。但是,对于每年10%的资本限制,股东大会可以授权董事会决定以更高的折扣发行股票(法国商法典第122-10-52条第2款)。此外,10%的折扣限制不适用于向姓名指定的一人或多人发行股票或向具有某些特征的人员类别发行股票(《法国商法典》第L225-138条)。可以说,这使得企业可以规避折扣的限制。参见:stacimane Torck,“Position AMF sur les offres de titres financiers par placement privprives: la voie de la raison”[2012]Droit des sociicans, 168, para 3;雷诺·莫蒂埃,《社会资本的逍遥期》(LexisNexis 2015) 252-53;Michael Loy,“资本与权利的互补(2009-80号法令)”[2009]JCP E 1766,第8段。也请进一步参阅第5节关于这种规避的可能性58 .关于新比利时公司法的解释性声明,议会议事厅(2017-2018),第319 /001号,260.56条第L225-136条至第L225-138条法国商法典。57 .投资协会,“股本管理指南”(2016年7月)(以下简称“股本管理指南”)Seth Armitage,“在配股发行中配售预先放弃股份的折扣”[2007]Journal of Business Finance & Accounting 1345;Eilis Ferran和Look Chan Ho,《公司财务法原理》(OUP 2014) 116-17和124-25.59优先认购组,“取消优先认购权”。60 .《原则声明》(2015)(以下简称“优先购买权指南”)Charles Howarth和Amy Waddington, Raj Panasar和Philip Boeckman的“私募”(编),欧洲证券法(OUP 2021) 236.61 Part 2A,优先购买指南第4段。62 ISS,“欧洲大陆-代理投票指南-基准政策建议”(2021年3月12日),17-18;格拉斯·刘易斯,《指南》。Glass Lewis代理通知方法概述。法国(2021),18-19;Proxinvest,《2021年政府企业与政治投票原则》(2021年1月)65-66;AFG,“建议政府和企业”(2021年1月),7.63贝莱德投资管理,“欧洲,中东和非洲证券的代理投票指南”(2021年1月),9-10和22;先锋基金,“英国和欧洲投资组合公司代理投票政策摘要”(2020年12月1日),10;道富环球投资管理公司,《代理投票和参与指南》。欧洲”(2021年3月),6.64 ISS,“欧洲大陆-代理投票指南-基准政策建议”(2021年3月12日),17;贝莱德投资管理,“欧洲、中东和非洲证券的代理投票指南”(2021年1月),9-10和12;先锋基金,“英国和欧洲投资组合公司代理投票政策摘要”(2020年12月1日),10;道富环球投资管理公司,《代理投票和参与指南》。欧洲”(2021年3月),6 65 Glass Lewis,“指南”。Glass Lewis代理通知方法概述。比利时(2021),13.66 ISS,“欧洲大陆-代理投票指南-基准政策建议”(2021年3月12日),27;格拉斯·刘易斯,《指南》。Glass Lewis代理通知方法概述。比利时(2021),13;格拉斯·刘易斯,《指南》。Glass Lewis代理通知方法概述。法国(2021),20-21;Proxinvest,《2021年政府企业与政治投票原则》(2021年1月),第65-66页;AFG,《企业政府建议》(2021年1月),第7期;贝莱德投资管理,《欧洲、中东和非洲证券的代理投票指南》(2021年1月),22-23页;道富环球投资管理公司,《代理投票和参与指南》。Louise Gullifer和Jennifer Payne,《公司金融法:原则和政策》(Hart 2015) 137;Eilis Ferran和Look Chan Ho,《公司财务法原理》(OUP 2014) 125;Paul Davies和Sarah Worthington, Gower的《现代公司法原则》(第10版,Sweet & Maxwell 2016) 812(认为优先权准则构成了“一项‘强有力的’默认规则,其变更对公司管理造成了重大障碍”。68代理顾问公司通常为机构股东提供研究和投票建议。英国代理顾问的名单可以在FCA的网站上找到:https://www.fca.org.uk/markets/primary-markets/proxy-advisors。 请参阅投票指南:ISS,“英国和爱尔兰代理投票指南”(2020年11月19日),26;格拉斯·刘易斯,《指南》。Glass Lewis代理通知方法概述。英国(2021),36-37另一家代理顾问公司Minerva Analytics没有发布投票指南,因为其客户有定制的投票政策,但它也以先发制人指南为起点。与Sarah Wilson (Minerva Analytics首席执行官)的电子邮件对话,2021年5月25日,与作者存档先发制人小组,“2017年5月监测报告”,11;Pre-Emption Group,“2016年5月监测报告”,12 70 Pre-Emption Group,“2017年5月监测报告”,3,6和8 .71为了收集数据,我感谢Theo Monnens,他是我指导下的研究助理所谓的“Gereglementeerde vastgoedvennootschap”(GVV)/“societssametsimmobiliires rsamglementsade”(SIR)。这些公司受2014年5月12日《比利时官方公报》(2014年6月30日)《关于受监管房地产公司的betreffende de gereglementeerde vastgoedvennootschappen法》管辖。例如,该法律第26条规定,受监管的房地产公司只能在优先认购的基础上发行股份(尽管法定优先认购权可以被不可转让且行使期较短的法定外优先认购权所取代),但在法定资本的框架内,每12个月发行的股份数量不得超过股本的10%。73这只封闭式投资基金名为Quest for Growth,即所谓的“privak”/“pricafs”,投资于非上市公司和成长型公司。此类公司受2016年7月10日《比利时官方公报》(2016年8月4日)“met betrekking to de alternative instellingen voor collectieve begging in niet- genteerde vennootschappen in groeibedrijven”(关于投资非上市公司和成长型公司的替代基金)的皇家法令约束。该法令第7条规定,私人投资公司原则上只能在优先购买权的基础上发行股份(虽然法定优先购买权可以由不可转让和行使期限较短的法定外优先购买权取代)见奈star重组:“beurswaakond vraagt奈star vereffening uit the steellen”(De Tijd, 2020年6月2日)更具体地说,由于这个原因,我排除了以下公司:valourec、法航-荷航、阿尔卑斯公司、Technicolor和latacimco<e:1>77 .在某些情况下,没有提到授权的数额占股本的百分比,在这种情况下,这种资料是从其他来源获得的,例如年度报告、普遍登记文件或股东大会记录在130家获得授权的法国公司中,55家(42%)规定私募比例较低。在其中34家公司(62%)中,较低的比例为股本的20%,这是通过私募发行股票的法定上限(《法国商法典》第L225-136条至第L225-138条-见上文第3节)78我还对收集数据时(2022年7月)的总机构所有权进行了回归,而不是我对历史总机构所有权的衡量。这个变化对结果没有实质性的影响这种分类是在以下文章中发展起来的:Eugene F. Fama和Kenneth R. French, ' Industry Costs of Equity ' [1997] Journal of Financial Economics, 153.80当模型中加入较少的控制变量时,统计显著性更强。当加入更多的控制变量时,小样本使得更难检测到统计上显著的结果参见机构投资者监督其投资组合公司的激励:Lucian Bebchuk, Alma Cohen和Scott Hirst,“机构投资者的代理问题”[2017]经济展望杂志89.82参见,例如:James Stock和Mark Watson, Introduction to econometrics (Pearson 2020) 230-31。然而,在所有模型中,方差膨胀因子(VIF)明显低于10,通常被认为是有问题的多重共线性的指示不幸的是,我使用的数据库S&P Capital IQ Pro不包含机构所有权的历史汇总,所以我必须手动汇总公司当前最大的200家机构投资者的数据。然而,这在机构所有权的测量中引入了一些噪音回想一下,比利时和法国的默认规则是不同的:在比利时,只有在明确允许的情况下,授权才能被用作收购防御;在法国,除非另有规定,否则授权可以用作收购防御。见上文第3节。
Authorisations to issue shares and disapply pre-emption rights in the UK, Belgium and France: law, economics and practice
ABSTRACTIn this paper, I analyse the role of shareholder approval and pre-emption rights in protecting shareholders in share issuances by listed corporations in the UK, Belgium and France. In these countries, shareholder approval and pre-emption rights are in principle required for share issuances, but the general meeting can authorise the board of directors to issue shares and disapply pre-emption rights. Proxy advisors and institutional investors have adopted guidelines that signal that they strongly support pre-emption rights and shareholder approval of share issuances. However, I provide empirical evidence that these guidelines are often not followed in France and Belgium, especially for smaller corporations with high levels of insider ownership. I contrast this with the strong impact of the guidelines in the UK. I also offer explanations for these differences, as well as policy options that would give shareholders a larger say on the balance between flexibility and accountability regarding authorisations.KEYWORDS: Share issuancesequity financeauthorisationsshareholder protectionpre-emption rightsshareholder approval AcknowledgmentsThe paper is based on a part of the author's doctoral thesis at the KU Leuven, which benefited from comments by Veerle Colaert, Marieke Wyckaert, Koen Geens, Hans De Wulf, John Armour and many other colleagues and friends throughout the years. I also want to thank the participants in the 2021 Bocconi-Oxford Young Corporate Law Scholars Workshop and the 2022 conference of the German Law and Economics Association for useful comments on this paper. The data discussed in this paper was collected with the help of Theo Monnens, a student of the master in law, econ-omics and business studies at the KU Leuven. I am very grateful to Theo for all his hard work on this project.Disclosure statementThe author's current position as a visiting professor at the University of Antwerp is funded by donations from several private partners of the Jean-Pierre Blumberg Chair, including listed corporations (the topic of this paper) and lawyers that typically advise such corporations. See this link for an overview of these partners: https://www.uantwerpen.be/en/chairs/jean-pierre-blumberg/partners/. The author is also affiliated as a lawyer with Linklaters Belgium, a law firm that regularly advises listed corporations, including on the topic of this paper. None of these entities provided any comments on the topic of this paper.Notes1 See for example: Marco Ventoruzzo, ‘Issuing New Shares and Preemptive Rights: A Comparative Analysis’ [2013] Richmond Journal of Global Law & Business 517; Edward Rock and others, ‘Fundamental Changes’ in Reinier Kraakman et al. (eds), The Anatomy of Corporate Law. A Comparative and Functional Approach (OUP 2016) 180–83.2 Second Directive Council 77/91/EEC on coordination of safeguards which, for the protection of the interests of members and others, are required by Member States of companies within the meaning of the second paragraph of Article 58 of the Treaty, in respect of the formation of public limited liability companies and the maintenance and alteration of their capital, with a view to making such safeguards equivalent [1977] OJ L26/1.3 Directive European Parliament and Council 2017/1132 relating to certain aspects of company law (codification) [2017] OJ L169/46.4 See further in Section 2.5 See further in Section 3.6 See further in Section 2.7 Gur Aminadav and Elias Papaioannou, ‘Corporate Control around the World’ [2020] Journal of Finance 1191, 1205.8 Aminadav and Papaioannou (n 7).9 This is the criticism from Lund on the article by Nili and Kastiel mentioned in the previous footnote: Dorothy Lund, ‘In Search of Good Corporate Governance’ [2022] Yale Law Journal Forum 854.10 See for a discussion of the different agency problems: John Armour and others, ‘What is Corporate Law?’ in Reinier Kraakman et al. (eds), The Anatomy of Corporate Law. A Comparative and Functional Approach (OUP 2016) 2.11 Jesse Fried and Holger Spamann, ‘Cheap-stock Tunneling Around Preemptive Rights’ [2020] Journal of Financial Economics 353.12 Making this argument: Edward Rock and others, ‘Fundamental Changes’ in Reinier Kraakman et al. (eds), The Anatomy of Corporate Law. A Comparative and Functional Approach (OUP 2016) 181–82; Eilis Ferran and Look Chan Ho, Principles of Corporate Finance Law (OUP 2014) 109.13 Jesse Fried, ‘Powering Preemptive Rights with Presubscription Disclosure’ in Luca Enriques and Tobias Tröger (eds), The Law and Finance of Related Party Transactions (CUP 2019) 80, citing Edward Rock and others, ‘Fundamental Changes’ in Reinier Kraakman et al. (eds), The Anatomy of Corporate Law. A Comparative and Functional Approach (OUP 2016) 182 (‘preemptive rights […] discourage controlling shareholders from acquiring additional shares from the firm at low prices’); Simeon Djankov and others, ‘The Law and Economics of Self-Dealing’ [2008] Journal of Financial Economics 430, 454 (‘in the absence of preemptive rights, insiders may expropriate minority shareholders by offering shares to related parties, or even to themselves, at below-market prices’).14 See, for example: Marco Ventoruzzo, ‘Issuing New Shares and Preemptive Rights: A Comparative Analysis’ [2013] Richmond Journal of Global Law & Business 517, 520; Eilis Ferran and Look Chan Ho, Principles of Corporate Finance Law (OUP 2014) 107; Louise Gullifer and Jennifer Payne, Corporate Finance Law: Principles and Policy (Hart 2015) 135.15 Jesse Fried and Holger Spamann, ‘Cheap-Stock Tunneling Around Preemptive Rights’ [2020] Journal of Financial Economics 353.16 I discuss this issue in a separate article: Tom Vos, ‘The transaction structure of rights offerings in France and Belgium’, working paper on file with the author. It is also discussed in Section 6.4 of my doctoral thesis: Tom Vos, Shareholder protection in share issuances. A comparative law and economics approach (unpublished doctoral thesis KU Leuven 2021).17 Ronald J Gilson, ‘Controlling Shareholders and Corporate Governance: Complicating the Comparative Taxonomy’ [2006] Harvard Law Review 1641, 1651.18 Zohar Goshen and Assaf Hamdani, ‘Corporate Control and Idiosyncratic Vision’ [2016] Yale Law Journal 560, 560 and 566.19 Luca Enriques and Paolo Vulpin, ‘Corporate Governance Reforms in Continental Europe’ [2007] Journal of Economic Perspectives 117, 122.20 Luca Enriques and Matteo Gatti, ‘Creeping Acquisitions in Europe: Enabling Companies to be Better Safe than Sorry’ [2015] Journal of Corporate Law Studies 55, 63.21 Compare, for example, the arguments against takeover defences generally: Lucian Bebchuk, ‘The Case Against Board Veto in Corporate Takeovers’ [2002] University of Chicago Law Review 973; Paul Davies, Klaus Hopt and Wolf-Georg Ringe, ‘Control Transactions’ in Reinier Kraakman et al. (eds), The Anatomy of Corporate Law. A Comparative and Functional Approach (OUP 2016) 207; with some of the arguments against takeover defences: Martin Lipton, ‘Takeover Bids in the Target’s Boardroom’ [1979] Business Lawyer 101, 108 and 113–16; Zohar Goshen and Richard Squire, ‘Principal Costs: A New Theory for Corporate Law and Governance’ [2017] Columbia Law Review 767, 817.22 A pre-emption right is essentially an option for the minority shareholder, which only has value as long as the market price of the shares is above the issue price. See: DTI, Pre-Emption Rights: Final Report. A study by Paul Myners into the impact of shareholders’ pre-emption rights on a public company’s ability to raise new capital’ (URN 05/679, February 2005) 11.23 Michael C Jensen, ‘Agency Costs of Free Cash Flow, Corporate Finance, and Takeovers [1986] American Economic Review 323. According to Jensen, free cash flows are cash flows in excess of those required to fund all valuable projects of the corporation.24 For sources that (implicitly or explicitly) make this argument, see: Alain Couret, Le droit préferentiel de souscription de l’actionnaire (unpublished doctoral thesis, Université de Toulouse 1978) 176–77; Julian Franks, Colin Mayer and Luc Renneboog, ‘Who Disciplines Management in Poorly Performing Companies?’ [2001] Journal of Financial Intermediation 209; Eilis Ferran, ‘Legal Capital Rules and Modern Securities Markets – The Case for Reform, as Illustrated by the UK Equity Markets’ in Klaus Hopt and Eddy Wymeersch (eds), Capital Markets and Company Law (OUP 2003) 121–22; DTI, Pre-Emption Rights: Final Report. A study by Paul Myners into the impact of shareholders’ pre-emption rights on a public company’s ability to raise new capital’ (URN 05/679, February 2005) 12; Eilis Ferran and Look Chan Ho, Principles of Corporate Finance Law (OUP 2014) 106; Louise Gullifer and Jennifer Payne, Corporate Finance Law: Principles and Policy (Hart 2015) 138; Paul Davies and Sarah Worthington, Gower’s Principles of Modern Company Law (10th edn, Sweet & Maxwell 2016) 813.25 Julian Franks, Colin Mayer and Luc Renneboog, ‘Who Disciplines Management in Poorly Performing Companies?’ [2001] Journal of Financial Intermediation 209, 244 (‘managers have incentives to drop pre-emption rights to allow equity issues to be made to new shareholders at a discount to the equilibrium price, thereby diluting existing shareholder wealth. The discount would be in exchange for implicit or explicit agreements to new shareholders to leave existing management in place’).26 Bernard S Black and John C Coffee, Jr., ‘Hail Britannia? Institutional Investor Behavior under Limited Regulation’ [1994] Michigan Law Review 1997, 2037 (‘companies know that if they attempt a coercive, deep discount offer, they are likely to face a shareholder revolt at the next annual meeting, and investment bankers know that a coercive rights offering will alienate their best customers’); Julian Franks, Colin Mayer and Luc Renneboog, ‘Who Disciplines Management in Poorly Performing Companies?’ [2001] Journal of Financial Intermediation 209, 228 (‘senior management at the largest fund managers in the United Kingdom informed us that although they might intervene where there was very poor performance, in the face of management opposition, they were likely to avoid confrontation because they disliked the consequent publicity and the costs of organizing other shareholders. However, it was a different story when the poorly performing company required new financing: ‘it comes to a crunch when companies raise additional finance’ or ‘it all unpicks when a company needs money.’).27 See for such arguments, for example: John Armour and others, ‘Private Enforcement of Corporate Law: An Empirical Comparison of the United Kingdom and the United States’ [2009] Journal of Empirical Legal Studies 687; Martin Gelter, ‘Why Do Shareholder Derivative Suits Remain Rare in Continental Europe?’ [2012] Brook Journal of International Law 843; John Armour, Henry Hansmann and Reinier Kraakman, ‘Agency Problems and Legal Strategies’ in Reinier Kraakman et al. (eds), The Anatomy of Corporate Law. A Comparative and Functional Approach (OUP 2016) 41–42.28 Zohar Goshen and Richard Squire, ‘Principal Costs: A New Theory for Corporate Law and Governance’ [2017] Columbia Law Review 767.29 Noting this problem, for example: Louise Gullifer and Jennifer Payne, Corporate Finance Law: Principles and Policy (Hart 2015) 130; Eilis Ferran and Look Chan Ho, Principles of Corporate Finance Law (OUP 2014) 110–11.30 Stephen Bainbridge, ‘Director Primacy and Shareholder Disempowerment’ [2006] Harvard Law Review 1735, 1745; Frank Easterbrook and Daniel Fischel, The Economic Structure of Corporate Law (Harvard University Press 1991) 66–67; Sanford Grossman and Oliver Hart, ‘One Share – One Vote and the Market for Corporate Control’ [1988] Journal of Financial Economics 175; Bernard S Black, ‘Agents Watching Agents: The Promise of Institutional Investor Voice’ [1992] UCLA Law Review 811, 821–22; Bernard S Black, ‘Shareholder Passivity Reexamined’ [1990] Michigan Law Review 520, 526–29.31 See, for example: Edward Rock and others, ‘Fundamental changes’ in Reinier Kraakman et al. (eds), The Anatomy of Corporate Law. A Comparative and Functional Approach (OUP 2016) 182: Marco Ventoruzzo, ‘Issuing New Shares and Preemptive Rights: A Comparative Analysis’ [2013] Richmond Journal of Global Law & Business 517, 518 and 521.32 Under the EU Prospectus Regulation, rights offerings will normally constitute an offer to the public in the member states where the corporation is listed, and will therefore require a prospectus, unless one of the exemptions to the prospectus requirement applies, for example if the corporation has fewer than 150 investors who are not qualified investors or if the issuance is sufficiently small. See: Charles Howarth and Amy Waddington, ‘Private placements’ in Raj Panasar and Philip Boeckman (eds), European Securities Law (OUP 2021) 235; Marie-Laurence Tibi, ‘France’ in Raj Panasar and Philip Boeckman (eds), European Securities Law (OUP 2021) 767–68.33 Charles Cardon, ‘L’augmentation du capital par placement privé issue de l’ordonnance du 22 janvier 2009’ [2009] RTDF 45, 51–52.34 See, for example: Michael C Jensen, ‘Agency Costs of Free Cash Flow, Corporate Finance, and Takeovers [1986] American Economic Review 323, 324 (‘The control function of debt is more important in organizations that generate large cash flows but have low growth prospects, and even more important in organizations that must shrink’). See also: Richard A Brealy, Stewart C Myers and Franklin Allen, Principles of Corporate Finance (13th edn, McGraw-Hill 2020) 500.35 See, for example: Harry DeAngelo, Linda DeAngelo and René M Stulz, ‘Seasoned Equity Offerings, Market Timing, and the Corporate Lifecycle’ [2010] Journal of Financial Economics 275 (finding evidence in support of the lifecycle theory that young firms with low operating cash flows issue shares to fund investments, while more mature firms pay out dividends and fund investment internally, although the lifecycle theory cannot explain all share issuances).36 Article 7:177 Belgian Companies Code; article L225-129 French Commercial Code; section 549 and 551 of the UK Companies Act.37 Peter Böckli and others, ‘The Consequences of Brexit for Companies and Company Law’ (2016) University of Cambridge Faculty of Law Research Paper No. 22/2017 .38 Article 7:177 iuncto article 7:153 Belgian Companies Code; article L225-129 iuncto L225-96 French Commercial Code.39 Section 551(8) iuncto section 282 UK Companies Act and section 571 iuncto section 283 UK Companies Act, respectively.40 This possibility has been implemented by the following provisions: section 549 and 551 UK Companies Act; articles L225-129-1 and L225-129-2 French Commercial Code; article 7:198 Belgian Companies Code.41 Stefan Grundmann, European Company Law (Intersentia 2012) 236.42 Section 570 UK Companies Act 2006; article L225-129-2, subsection 3 iuncto article L225-135 and following French Commercial Code; article 7:200, 1° Belgian Companies Code.43 Article 7:202 of the Belgian Companies Code. This provision also limits the size of the issuance to 10% of capital and requires an issue price that is at least equal to the bid price. In addition, it limits the duration of the authorization to three years.44 Article L233-32, I of the French Commercial Code.45 Article 21 of the Takeover Code limits the use of defensive measures in general (including share issuances) in response to a takeover bid. See also: article 7:201 Belgian Companies Code (prohibition for authorisations with regard to the issuance of subscription rights, shares with multiple voting rights, shares in exchange for a contribution in kind by a 10% shareholder or a new class of shares); article L225-147 French Commercial Code (with regard to shares issued in exchange for contributions in kind, with some exceptions in article L22-10-53 French Commercial Code). In the UK, the Listing Rules also require shareholder approval for certain share issuances, for example, for share issuances to related parties (LR 11) or for share issuances at a discount higher than 10% (LR 9.5.10), with exceptions for rights issues.46 Article 7:199 Belgian Companies Code; section 551(3) and (4) UK Companies Act 2006.47 Article L225-129-2 French Commercial Code (the so-called ‘délégation de competence’). The general meeting can also decide on the share issuance itself but delegate the modalities of implementation to the board of directors, a ‘délégation de pouvoir’ (article L225-129-1 iuncto article L225-129 French Commercial Code). The latter delegation is valid for five years. In practice, however, listed corporations in France always opt for a shorter, but more general authorization, as appears from the empirical research described in Section 5.2.48 Article L225-138, III French Commercial Code.49 This requirement has been implemented by the following provisions: Article 7:188 Belgian Companies Code; article L225-132 French Commercial Code; section 561 UK Companies Act.50 Article L225-132, subsection 3 French Commercial Code; article 7:189, subsection 4 Belgian Companies Code; section 561(2) UK Companies Act. However, corporations can disapply pre-emption rights and grant shareholders extra-statutory non-transferable pre-emption rights. See for France: Renaud Mortier, Opérations sur capital social (LexisNexis 2015) 236–37 and 244–47; Alain Couret and Hervé Le Nabasque, Valeurs mobilières. Augmentations de capital. Nouveau régime. Ordonnances des 25 mars et 24 juin 2004 (Editions Francis Lefebvre 2004) 122–26. See for Belgium: Marieke Wyckaert and Joris De Wolf, ‘Transacties met verbonden partijen in genoteerde vennootschappen na SRD II’ [2020] Bank en Financieel Recht 247, 257. See for the UK: Louise Gullifer and Jennifer Payne, Corporate Finance Law: Principles and Policy (Hart 2015) 136.51 See also the implementation in the following provisions: article 7:191 Belgian Companies Code; article 7:193 Belgian Companies Code; article L225-135 French Commercial Code; article L225-138 French Commercial Code; section 571(6) UK Companies Act; UK Listing Rule 13.8.2.52 Stefan Grundmann, European Company Law (Intersentia 2012) 239–40. See also: ECJ 19 November 1996, Case C-42/95 Siemens AG v. Henry Nold [1996] ECR I-06017-I (holding that member states may also grant pre-emption rights when shares are issued in exchange for a contribution in kind and that they may subject the disapplication of pre-emption rights to additional conditions).53 See, for example: article 7:193 Belgian Companies Code (voting prohibition for 10% shareholders in whose favour pre-emption rights are disapplied); article 7:200, 2° Belgian Companies Code (voting prohibition for directors who are a de facto representative of a counterparty in a non-pre-emptive share issuance); article 7:97 Belgian Companies Code (voting prohibition for directors who are ‘involved’ in a transaction with a related party, which includes non-pre-emptive share issuances to related parties); article L225-138 French Commercial Code (voting prohibition for shareholders in whose favour pre-emption rights are disapplied); UK Listing Rule 11.1.7 (voting prohibition for shareholders who participate in related party transactions, which includes non-pre-emptive share issuances to related parties).54 See for the UK: Listing Rule 9.5.10 (maximum discount of 10% for share issuances that are not a rights issue with transferable rights, unless a higher discount is specifically approved by shareholders). See for France: articles L225-136 and R22-10-32 French Commercial Code. However, for a limit of 10% of capital per year, the general meeting can authorise the board to decide on a share issuance with a higher discount (article L22-10-52, subsection 2 French Commercial Code). In addition, the 10% limit to the discount does not apply when shares are issued to one or more persons designated by name or to categories of persons sharing certain characteristics (article L225-138 French Commercial Code). This arguably allows corporations to circumvent the limit to the discount. See: Stéphane Torck, ‘Position AMF sur les offres de titres financiers par placement privé: la voie de la raison’ [2012] Droit des sociétés 168, para 3; Renaud Mortier, Opérations sur capital social (LexisNexis 2015) 252–53; Michael Loy, ‘L’augmentation de capital sans droit préférentiel de souscription par placement privé (Ordonnance n° 2009-80 du 22 janvier 2009)’ [2009] JCP E 1766, para 8. See also further in Section 5 about this possibility of circumvention.55 Explanatory Statement on the New Belgian Companies Code, Parliamentary Proceedings Chamber of Representatives (2017-2018), nr. 3119/001, 260.56 Article L225-136 iuncto article L225-138 French Commercial Code.57 The Investment Association, ‘Share Capital Management Guidelines’ (July 2016) (hereinafter ‘Share Capital Management Guidelines’).58 See for a more detailed discussion of the difference between rights issues and open offers: Seth Armitage, ‘Discounts in Placing Pre-renounced Shares in Rights Issues’ [2007] Journal of Business Finance & Accounting 1345; Eilis Ferran and Look Chan Ho, Principles of Corporate Finance Law (OUP 2014) 116–17 and 124–25.59 Pre-Emption Group, ‘Disapplying pre-emption rights. A statement of principles’ (2015) (hereinafter ‘Pre-emption Guidelines’).60 Charles Howarth and Amy Waddington, ‘Private Placements’ in Raj Panasar and Philip Boeckman (eds), European Securities Law (OUP 2021) 236.61 Part 2A, paragraph 4 of the Pre-emption Guidelines.62 ISS, ‘Continental Europe – Proxy Voting Guidelines – Benchmark Policy Recommendations’ (12 March 2021), 17–18 ; Glass Lewis, ‘Guidelines. An Overview of the Glass Lewis Approach to Proxy Advice. France’ (2021), 18–19 ; Proxinvest, ‘Principes de gouvernement d’entreprise et Politique de vote 2021’ (January 2021) 65–66 ; AFG, ‘Recommandations sur le gouvernement d’entreprise’ (January 2021), 7 .63 Blackrock Investment Stewardship, ‘Proxy voting guidelines for European, Middle Eastern, and African securities’ (January 2021), 9–10 and 22 ; Vanguard Funds, ‘Summary of the Proxy Voting Policy for UK and European Portfolio Companies’ (1 December 2020), 10 ; State Street Global Advisors, ‘Proxy Voting and Engagement Guidelines. Europe’ (March 2021), 6 .64 ISS, ‘Continental Europe – Proxy Voting Guidelines – Benchmark Policy Recommendations’ (12 March 2021), 17 ; Blackrock Investment Stewardship, ‘Proxy Voting Guidelines for European, Middle Eastern, and African Securities’ (January 2021), 9–10 and 12 ; Vanguard Funds, ‘Summary of the Proxy Voting Policy for UK and European Portfolio Companies’ (1 December 2020), 10, ; State Street Global Advisors, ‘Proxy Voting and Engagement Guidelines. Europe’ (March 2021), 6 65 Glass Lewis, ‘Guidelines. An Overview of the Glass Lewis Approach to Proxy Advice. Belgium’ (2021), 13 .66 ISS, ‘Continental Europe – Proxy Voting Guidelines – Benchmark Policy Recommendations’ (12 March 2021), 27 ; Glass Lewis, ‘Guidelines. An Overview of the Glass Lewis Approach to Proxy Advice. Belgium’ (2021), 13 ; Glass Lewis, ‘Guidelines. An Overview of the Glass Lewis Approach to Proxy Advice. France’ (2021), 20–21 ; Proxinvest, ‘Principes de gouvernement d’entreprise et Politique de vote 2021’ (January 2021), 65–66 ; AFG, ‘Recommandations sur le gouvernement d’entreprise’ (January 2021), 7 ; Blackrock Investment Stewardship, ‘Proxy Voting Guidelines for European, Middle Eastern, and African Securities’ (January 2021), 22–23 ; State Street Global Advisors, ‘Proxy Voting and Engagement Guidelines. Europe’ (March 2021), 7 67 Louise Gullifer and Jennifer Payne, Corporate Finance Law: Principles and Policy (Hart 2015) 137; Eilis Ferran and Look Chan Ho, Principles of Corporate Finance Law (OUP 2014) 125; Paul Davies and Sarah Worthington, Gower’s Principles of Modern Company Law (10th edn, Sweet & Maxwell 2016) 812 (arguing that the Pre-emption Guidelines constitute ‘a ‘strong’ default rule whose alteration creates a significant hurdle for the management of the company’.68 Proxy advisors are firms that generally offer research and voting advice to institutional shareholders. A list of proxy advisors in the UK can be found on the website of the FCA: https://www.fca.org.uk/markets/primary-markets/proxy-advisors. See for the voting guidelines: ISS, ‘United Kingdom and Ireland Proxy Voting Guidelines’ (19 November 2020), 26 ; Glass Lewis, ‘Guidelines. An Overview of the Glass Lewis Approach to Proxy Advice. United Kingdom’ (2021), 36–37 Another proxy advisor, Minerva Analytics, does not publish voting guidelines, as its clients have bespoke voting policies, but it also takes the Pre-emption Guidelines as the starting point. E-mail conversation with Sarah Wilson (CEO of Minerva Analytics), 25 May 2021, on file with the author.69 Pre-Emption Group, ‘Monitoring Report May 2017’, 11 ; Pre-Emption Group, ‘Monitoring report May 2016’, 12 70 Pre-Emption Group, ‘Monitoring Report May 2017’, 3, 6 and 8 .71 For the collection of the data, I am indebted to Theo Monnens, a research assistant who worked under my supervision.72 The so-called ‘Gereglementeerde vastgoedvennootschap’ (GVV)/’sociétés immobilières réglementées’ (SIR). These corporations are governed by the Law of 12 May 2014 ‘betreffende de gereglementeerde vastgoedvennootschappen’ [concerning regulated real estate corporations’], Belgian Official Journal 30 June 2014. For example, article 26 of that law stipulates that regulated real estate corporation can only issue shares on a pre-emptive basis (although the statutory pre-emption rights may be replaced by extra-statutory pre-emption rights that are not transferable and have a shorter exercise period), except within the framework of the authorized capital for an amount of 10% of share capital per 12 months.73 The closed-end investment fund is Quest for Growth, a so-called ‘privak’/‘pricafs’, which invests in non-listed corporations and growth corporations. Such a corporation is subject to the Royal Decree of 10 July 2016 ‘met betrekking tot de alternatieve instellingen voor collectieve belegging in niet-genoteerde vennootschappen en in groeibedrijven’ [concerning alternative funds for the investment in non-listed corporations and growth corporations], Belgian Official Journal 4 August 2016. Article 7 of that decree states that a private investment corporation can, in principle, only issue shares on a pre-emptive basis (although the statutory pre-emption rights may be replaced by extra-statutory pre-emption rights that are not transferable and have a shorter exercise period).74 See on the Nyrstar restructuring: ‘Beurswaakhond vraagt Nyrstar vereffening uit te stellen’ (De Tijd, 2 June 2020).75 More specifically, I excluded the following corporations for this reason: Vallourec, Air France – KLM, Compagnie des Alpes, Technicolor and Latécoère.76 In some cases, the amount of the authorization as a percentage of share capital is not mentioned, in which case this information was obtained from other sources, such as the annual report, the universal registration document or the minutes of the general meeting.77 Of the 130 French corporations with an authorisation, 55 (42%) stipulate a lower percentage for private placements. In 34 of these corporations (62%), the lower percentage was 20% of share capital, which is the legal maximum for authorisations to issue shares through a private placement (Article L225-136 iuncto article L225-138 French Commercial Code – see above in Section 3).78 I also ran the regressions with the aggregate institutional ownership at the moment of data collection (July 2022) instead of my measure of the historical aggregate institutional ownership. This change does not materially affect the results.79 This classification was developed in the following article: Eugene F. Fama and Kenneth R. French, ‘Industry Costs of Equity’ [1997] Journal of Financial Economics 153.80 The statistical significance is stronger when fewer control variables are added to the model. The small sample makes it more difficult to detect statistically significant results when adding more control variables.81 See generally about the incentives of institutional investors to monitor their portfolio corporations: Lucian Bebchuk, Alma Cohen and Scott Hirst, ‘The Agency Problems of Institutional Investors’ [2017] Journal of Economic Perspectives 89.82 See, for example: James Stock and Mark Watson, Introduction to econometrics (Pearson 2020) 230–31. However, in all of the models, the Variance Inflation Factor (VIF) is significantly below 10, typically considered to be an indication of problematic multicollinearity.83 The database that I use, S&P Capital IQ Pro, unfortunately does not contain historical aggregates of institutional ownership, so I had to aggregate the data manually from the current largest 200 institutional investors in the corporation. However, this introduces some noise in the measurement of institutional ownership.84 Recall that the default rule is different in Belgium and in France: in Belgium, authorisations can only be used as a takeover defence if they allow this explicitly; in France, authorisations can be used as a takeover defence unless provided otherwise. See above in Section 3.85 Angrist and Pischke argue that a linear probability model (essentially an OLS regression with a binary dependent variable), as is used here, is more appropriate and easier to interpret in many circumstances than a probit model. See: Joshua Angrist and Jörn-Steffen Pischke, Mostly Harmless Econometrics: An Empiricist’s Companion (Princeton University Press 2009) 94–107. In any case, the results are very similar if a probit model is used.86 See for empirical evidence on shareholder structures: Gur Aminadav and Elias Papaioannou, ‘Corporate Control Around the World’ [2020] Journal of Finance 1191, 1205.87 Adriana De La Cruz, Alejandra Medina and Yung Tang, ‘Owners of the World’s Listed Companies’ (17 October 2019), OECD Capital Markets Series, 37 .88 Yaron Nili and Kobi Kastiel, ‘The Corporate Governance Gap’ [2022] Yale Law Journal 782 (providing novel empirical evidence on various corporate governance provisions in the US for a large sample of both small and large corporations and finding that smaller corporations have not moved away from provisions that entrench insiders to the same extent as larger corporations have; Nili and Kastiel do not study authorisations to issue shares; however, as such provisions are not used in the US to discipline insiders, their explanations of the corporate governance gap remain relevant).89 Asaf Eckstein, ‘The Rise of Corporate Guidelines in the Unites States, 2005–2021: Theory and Evidence’ [2022] Indiana Law Journal (forthcoming), 7 (finding that larger corporations in the US are more likely to reference corporate governance guidelines of (associations of) institutional investors in their proxy statement).90 See for an empirical study of shareholder proposals in several countries, including Belgium and France: Viktor Verheyden, ‘When Shareholders Use Their Rights to Convene Meetings and to Submit Proposals. A Comparative and Empirical Analysis of Activism in Four EU Member States’ [2020] Tijdschrift voor Rechtspersoon en Vennootschap – Revue pratique des sociétés 975.91 See for a similar argument that more frequent votes give shareholders more power to hold managers accountable, but with regard to director elections: Lucian Bebchuk, ‘The Myth of the Shareholder Franchise’ [2007] 675 Virginia Law Review 695–96.92 Cass. com. (FR) 25 September 2012, Bulletin Joly Sociétés 2012, 847, note Renaud Mortier; Position-recommendation AMF DOC-2020-06, ‘Guide d’élaboration des prospectus et information à fournir en cas d’offre au public ou d’admission de titres financiers’ (29 April 2021), 87 93 Separate resolutions are provided for by the template resolutions drafted by the Pre-Emption Group: Pre-Emption Group, ‘Template Resolutions for the Disapplication of pre-Emption Rights Complying with the Pre-Emption Group’s Statement of Principles’, 4 .94 Pre-Emption Group, ‘Monitoring Report May 2017’, 4 .95 Article 7:202 of the Belgian Companies Code.96 Yaron Nili and Kobi Kastiel, ‘The Corporate Governance Gap’ [2022] Yale Law Journal 782.97 Dorothy Lund, ‘In Search of Good Corporate Governance’ [2022] Yale Law Journal Forum 854.98 This is the position taken by Dorothy Lund, at least with regard to passive institutional investors: Dorothy Lund, ‘In Search of Good Corporate Governance’ [2022] Yale Law Journal Forum 854. See also in more detail: Dorothy Lund, ‘The Case Against Passive Shareholder Voting’ [2018] Journal of Corporation Law 493.99 See for this argument: Lucian Bebchuk, Alma Cohen and Scott Hirst, ‘The Agency Problems of Institutional Investors’ [2017] 89 Journal of Economic Perspectives 102–3. See for empirical evidence: Gerald F Davis and E Han Kim, ‘Business Ties and Proxy Voting by Mutual Funds’ [2007] Journal of Financial Economics 552 (finding that fund families with more pension-related business ties to corporations vote more often with management with regard to shareholder proposals in general); Rasha Ashraf, Narayanan Jayaraman and Harley E Ryan, JR., ‘Do Pension-Related Business Ties Influence Mutual Fund Proxy Voting? Evidence from Shareholder Proposals on Executive Compensation’ [2012] Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 567 (finding that fund families with more pension-related business ties to corporations vote more often with management with regard to votes on executive compensation); Dragana Cvijanovi, Amil Dasgupta and Konstantinos E Zachariadis, ‘Ties That Bind: How Business Connections Affect Mutual Fund Activism’ [2016] Journal of Finance 2933 (providing empirical evidence in the US between 2003 and 2011 that mutual fund families with business ties to the corporation (through the management of pension plans) vote more often with management on shareholder proposals in closely contested votes); Lucian Bebchuk and Scott Hirst, ‘Index Funds and the Future of Corporate Governance: Theory, Evidence, and Policy’ [2019] Columbia Law Review 2091 (providing evidence that the three biggest index funds tend to vote with management in say-on-pay votes, much more often than more actively managed funds do and more often than proxy advisors recommend).Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by Fonds Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek.Notes on contributorsTom VosTom Vos, a researcher and visiting professor at the Jean-Pierre Blumberg Chair in corporate governance of the University of Antwerp, a voluntary scientific collaborator at the Jan Ronse Institute for Company and Financial Law of the KU Leuven and an attorney at Linklaters LLP (Belgium).