Dynamics in ownership and firm survival: Evidence from corporate Germany
Content
This study investigates the determinants of changes in corporate ownership and firm
failure, taking into account different types of sellers and buyers of control blocks.
For a large panel of German corporations we find that firms are more likely to fail
or to be sold when performance is poor, financial pressure is high, and firm size
is small. Cross-ownership deters control changes, and ownership concentration has
a non-linear impact on the likelihood of control transfer. In contrast to corporate
shareholders, private shareholders tend to sell control blocks when financial pressure
increases.
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