Abstract

ABSTRACT This study explores the effect of corporate ownership structure on firm performance resulting from a firm’s strategic decision of corporate name change. First, the study uses the separation of ownership and control to capture the corporate ownership structure using a new shareholder distribution metric. Second, the study empirically estimates the main and interaction effects of shareholder distribution on a firm’s performance resulting from its corporate name change using data from the Australian Securities Exchange from 2017 to 2022, during which 457 unique firms changed their corporate names. The study finds shareholding distribution has contrasting effects on firm performance due to the corporate name change. The positive impact of shareholder distribution on a firm’s abnormal returns is attenuated due to the corporate name change. Thus, while a manager-controlled firm, characterized by its larger shareholder distribution, reaps more benefits, such benefits are reduced when it makes strategic decisions, such as corporate name change. The study attributes such reduction in firm benefit to owner-manager conflict emanating from a firm’s dispersed corporate ownership structure.

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