Does the criminalization of independent director's breaches of fiduciary duties increase shareholder value? Evidence from Singapore

Whether a breach of directors’ fiduciary duties should be treated as civil or criminal in nature is a controversial issue. In a recent court case, for the first time in Singapore, independent directors were arrested and criminally sanctioned for breaches of their fiduciary duties to exercise reasona...

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Main Author: Liu, Na
Other Authors: Qu Tianshu
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/70391
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-703912024-01-12T10:16:41Z Does the criminalization of independent director's breaches of fiduciary duties increase shareholder value? Evidence from Singapore Liu, Na Qu Tianshu Nanyang Business School DRNTU::Business::Accounting::Corporate governance Whether a breach of directors’ fiduciary duties should be treated as civil or criminal in nature is a controversial issue. In a recent court case, for the first time in Singapore, independent directors were arrested and criminally sanctioned for breaches of their fiduciary duties to exercise reasonable diligence in corporate disclosure. Exploring relevant events around this case, I examine whether criminalizing the breach of independent directors’ fiduciary duties increases or decreases shareholder value. I find a significantly negative stock market reaction to the events associated with the criminal sanction of independent directors for firms with more independent directors. I explore three possible channels through which shareholder value is decreased. First, I examine whether independent directors become overcautious and request additional unnecessary disclosures which increase companies’ disclosure costs. Second, I examine whether independent directors request additional directors’ fees to compensate for the increased liabilities. Third, I examine whether the chilling effect of the court case is so strong that even competent independent directors leave the company. I find evidence consistent with the first story but no evidence consistent with the other two. Doctor of Philosophy (NBS) 2017-04-24T01:19:32Z 2017-04-24T01:19:32Z 2017 Thesis Liu, N. (2017). Does the criminalization of independent director's breaches of fiduciary duties increase shareholder value? Evidence from Singapore. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. http://hdl.handle.net/10356/70391 10.32657/10356/70391 en 47 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Business::Accounting::Corporate governance
spellingShingle DRNTU::Business::Accounting::Corporate governance
Liu, Na
Does the criminalization of independent director's breaches of fiduciary duties increase shareholder value? Evidence from Singapore
description Whether a breach of directors’ fiduciary duties should be treated as civil or criminal in nature is a controversial issue. In a recent court case, for the first time in Singapore, independent directors were arrested and criminally sanctioned for breaches of their fiduciary duties to exercise reasonable diligence in corporate disclosure. Exploring relevant events around this case, I examine whether criminalizing the breach of independent directors’ fiduciary duties increases or decreases shareholder value. I find a significantly negative stock market reaction to the events associated with the criminal sanction of independent directors for firms with more independent directors. I explore three possible channels through which shareholder value is decreased. First, I examine whether independent directors become overcautious and request additional unnecessary disclosures which increase companies’ disclosure costs. Second, I examine whether independent directors request additional directors’ fees to compensate for the increased liabilities. Third, I examine whether the chilling effect of the court case is so strong that even competent independent directors leave the company. I find evidence consistent with the first story but no evidence consistent with the other two.
author2 Qu Tianshu
author_facet Qu Tianshu
Liu, Na
format Theses and Dissertations
author Liu, Na
author_sort Liu, Na
title Does the criminalization of independent director's breaches of fiduciary duties increase shareholder value? Evidence from Singapore
title_short Does the criminalization of independent director's breaches of fiduciary duties increase shareholder value? Evidence from Singapore
title_full Does the criminalization of independent director's breaches of fiduciary duties increase shareholder value? Evidence from Singapore
title_fullStr Does the criminalization of independent director's breaches of fiduciary duties increase shareholder value? Evidence from Singapore
title_full_unstemmed Does the criminalization of independent director's breaches of fiduciary duties increase shareholder value? Evidence from Singapore
title_sort does the criminalization of independent director's breaches of fiduciary duties increase shareholder value? evidence from singapore
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/70391
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