Networked ownership: How large institutional investors influence corporate behaviour and outcomes
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Date
2025
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Saudi Digital Library
Abstract
This thesis explores how common blockholder networks – formed when institutional
blockholders simultaneously hold at least 5% of multiple firms within or across industries –
relate to firms’ outcomes, including information asymmetry, managerial tunnelling, and ESG
performance. As institutional investors diversify their holdings across hundreds of firms,
their focus may shift from maximising individual firm value to optimising portfolio-wide
outcomes, potentially altering how firms are monitored and managed.
To investigate this, we model a network where nodes represent US public firms and links
indicate common blockholders. Our results show that highly central firms, those with more
ownership ties, are associated with: (1) a narrower bid–ask spread, reflecting increased
demand for public information that improves transparency. Because public information is
more accessible and less costly than private information, this demand may reflect a strategic
shift from private to public information as institutional investors balance costs and benefits;
(2) they are also associated with greater tunnelling activity. Consistent with the idea that
common blockholders may, at times, tolerate value transfers across firms when these serve
broader portfolio interest, and (3) they are also associated with stronger ESG performance,
reflecting efforts to manage systematic ESG risk through media-driven governance.
This thesis makes three key contributions. It suggests that while common blockholder
networks are associated with reduced information asymmetry, they may also be linked to
weaker firm-level accountability, as investors balance oversight across broader portfolios.
From this perspective, tunnelling can be viewed not solely as a governance failure, but as a
strategic redistribution of resources aimed at stabilising the network. Second, the analysis
highlights the potential strategic role of network centrality. Firms occupying more central
positions in blockholder networks tend to exhibit patterns suggesting that network position
may shape how governance and monitoring priorities are allocated. Third, the thesis shows
that common blockholders may prioritise ESG improvements in centrally positioned firms,
where extensive ownership ties provide leverage to influence broader network behaviour and
mitigate systematic or reputational ESG risks across the portfolio.
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Keywords
Common blockholder networks, Information asymmetry, Tunnelling, ESG performance.
