The Shared Costs of Pursuing Shareholder Values
Michele Fioretti, Victor Saint-Jean, Simon C. Smith

TL;DR
This paper investigates how visible shareholder identities influence firms' costly prosocial actions during crises, revealing that prominent individual shareholders drive more visible actions, which entail significant shared costs for firms.
Contribution
It introduces a novel model linking shareholder visibility to firm actions and uses quasi-experimental variation to empirically identify the impact of prominent shareholders during crises.
Findings
Firms with prominent shareholders are more likely to take visible actions during crises.
Such actions lead to a 1-3% reduction in investment, productivity, and profitability.
Visible actions impose shared costs on firms, affecting their economic performance.
Abstract
We study how shareholder values shape firms' costly prosocial actions and who bears their costs. We develop a model in which some shareholders are publicly associated with a firm (e.g., founders or other prominent individual blockholders). When the firm takes a visible action under intense media scrutiny, these shareholders can plausibly claim credit and gain reputation, while diversified institutional investors cannot. The key empirical challenge is that influence is rarely observed: many consequential decisions are not subject to shareholder proposals or votes. We therefore use predetermined annual general meeting (AGM) timing combined with large, sudden crises -- COVID-19 and the invasion of Ukraine -- to generate quasi-experimental variation in attention and attribution, and to study highly visible, high-cost actions that were not legally required at onset. Firms with prominent…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMedia Influence and Politics · Financial Markets and Investment Strategies · Experimental Behavioral Economics Studies
