It's almost an axiom of corporate governance: Shareholders should have the power to fire top management if they can muster a majority of the votes
Executives who are insulated from direct shareholder wrath, the thinking goes, will be more tempted to put their own interests before those of their investors and squander corporate assets on harebrained projects.
“From Adam Smith on, the concern of corporate governance has been how to mind the managers,†notes Robert Daines, a professor of finance (by courtesy) at Stanford Graduate School of Business and a professor at Stanford Law School. “Corporate governance has been about building up checks and monitors on the managers. The idea is that if we can fire them, and they know we can fire them, then maybe they will do the right thing.â€
Yet a startling new study coauthored by Daines finds that younger, smaller companies on the cutting edge of technology do better when their top executives don’t have that sword hanging over them.
The study found strong evidence that executives who don’t have to worry about shareholder insurrections make bigger and bolder investments in research and long-term growth. Those decisions may be risky and unpopular at first, but they generally lead to faster innovation, higher profitability, and higher stock valuations in the years that follow.
Daines adds one big asterisk, however. Insulating top executives from investor pressure only seems to benefit younger, smaller companies that rely on innovation for growth. For big and established companies in mature industries, entrenched management often leads to lower valuations down the road.
This piece originally appeared in Stanford Business Insights from Stanford Graduate School of Business. To receive business ideas and insights from Stanford GSB click here: (To sign up : https://www.gsb.stanford.edu/insights/about/emails ) ]