Charles A. Dice Center for Research in Financial Economics
Shareholder Wealth and Firm Risk
Hyun-Han Shin and René
M. Stulz
ABSTRACT
The evidence presented here is inconsistent with variants
of corporate finance theory which hold that the option properties of growth
opportunities or asset substitution incentives are first-order determinants of
equity values, but it is supportive of risk management and capital structure
theories that emphasize the costs of cash flow volatility. Specifically,
controlling for known determinants of changes in shareholder wealth, we find
that the change in shareholder wealth over one year is inversely related to the
change in expected equity volatility over the same year in cross-section
regressions. This relation holds consistently through time for all but the
largest firms and is economically significant. It is stronger for firms with
weaker financial health. When we decompose volatility into beta risk and
idiosyncratic risk, we find that shareholder wealth is positively related to
beta changes, so that our evidence cannot be explained by a beta effect. Nor can
the evidence be explained by the impact of returns on volatility predicted by
the leverage effect studied in the option pricing literature.
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