In a publicly traded company with widely dispersed ownership, the free-rider problem in corporate governance is most effectively solved when a large number of small, individual shareholders independently decide to monitor management, as their collective numbers outweigh the influence of any single large investor.
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A large corporation has millions of individual shareholders, each owning a very small fraction of the company. The company's management is widely seen as underperforming, but the process of organizing shareholders to challenge the board of directors is complex and expensive. The benefits of a successful challenge, such as a higher stock price, would be distributed among all shareholders, regardless of who undertook the effort and expense. Given this situation, which of the following events would most likely lead to a successful challenge of the current management?
Incentives for Corporate Oversight
Incentives for Shareholder Activism
In a publicly traded company with widely dispersed ownership, the free-rider problem in corporate governance is most effectively solved when a large number of small, individual shareholders independently decide to monitor management, as their collective numbers outweigh the influence of any single large investor.
Motivation for Shareholder Activism
Match each company's shareholder structure with the most likely outcome regarding shareholder oversight of management.
Calculating the Incentive for Shareholder Activism
Evaluating Potential Shareholder Activism
An activist investor holds a 10% stake in a corporation currently valued at $100 million. The investor calculates that spending $500,000 to organize a shareholder campaign to replace the board of directors could increase the corporation's total value by 20%. From a purely financial perspective for the activist investor, which of the following decisions is most logical and why?
Evaluating an Activist Investor's Campaign