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Conferences & lectures

The Prevalence of Advance Notice Provisions in Corporate Bylaws

The RBC Professorship in Responsible Organizations and the Stephen A. Jarislowsky Chair in Corporate Governance have the pleasure to announce a talk at Concordia University by Professor Anita Anand from the University of Toronto, known for her work in business ethics and law


Date & time
Friday, December 4, 2015
10 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Speaker(s)

Anita Anand

Cost

This event is free

Contact

Claudine Mangen

Where

John Molson Building
1450 Guy
Room 6.425

Wheel chair accessible

Yes

In recent years, firms have implemented advance notice provisions (ANPs) in their bylaws. ANPs require shareholders to comply with certain procedures and disclosure requirements if they intend to nominate directors at a shareholders’ meeting.  With a focus on ANPs, this is the first study that examines bylaw changes from an empirical standpoint. The study is based on hand collected bylaw amendments between 2004 and 2015 for 1,156 Canadian corporations listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange. We hypothesize that firms more vulnerable to a takeover bid or proxy contest are more likely to propose an ANP. 

In univariate and multivariate analysis, we find support for this hypothesis along several measures of vulnerability, including peer exposure to a proxy contest or takeover bid, industry dummies, and various measures of shareholder concentration.  We do not find evidence to support an alternative hypothesis that firms propose an ANP in lock-step with others in their industry.  We also examine the potential rationales for proposing an ANP using an event study. We conclude that ANPs are implemented by vulnerable firms seeking to impede a change of control.

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