In China's concentrated ownership market, vetoes against proposals sponsored by controlling shareholders and their affiliates at general meetings (GMs) constitute a salient and confrontational form of minority activism. This study exploits this setting to investigate whether banks incorporate minority shareholder voice through voting opposition into lending decisions when assessing borrower risk.
Using hand-collected data on vetoes against insider-sponsored proposals from all annual and extraordinary GMs of A-share listed firms between 2010 and 2023, this study employs propensity score matching (PSM) and a difference-in-differences (DID) design to compare bank loan financing between vetoed firms and matched non-vetoed firms. Instrumental variable (IV) estimation, stacked DID, DID imputation, placebo tests, and alternative loan measures are further used to address endogeneity concerns and strengthen the robustness of the results.
The results show that, relative to matched non-vetoed firms, vetoed firms face a significant decline in bank loan financing, regardless of proposal type. Additional analyses indicate that the decline is concentrated in short-term loans. Target firms are more likely to pledge collateral, less likely to obtain unsecured credit, and face higher loan pricing, and the contentiousness of voting outcomes is associated with greater bank loan declines. Mechanism analyses show that corporate information risk (proxied by analyst forecast dispersion and discretionary accruals), and credit risk (proxied by lower Z-scores and credit rating downgrades) increase after firms experience vetoes. Heterogeneity analyses reveal stronger adverse effects of vetoes for firms without ties to the Big 5 state-owned banks, firms attracting GM-related investor postings on official interactive platforms, firms facing independent director dissent at board deliberations, and firms receiving regulatory inquiry letters. In response, vetoed firms rely more on trade credit as a substitute financing source to counteract liquidity pressures.
Our study enriches the literature on shareholder activism in concentrated markets where activism remains nascent and highlights the information value of minority voting dissent for banks. Corporate boards, managers, and creditors should not underestimate minority voice when assessing governance concerns and borrower risk.
This study manually constructs a proposal-level dataset on vetoes against insider-sponsored proposals. In contrast to prior studies that examine the impact of voting on equityholders, this study focuses on the informational value of voting dissent from the perspective of an important stakeholder: banks.
