For years suspicions have abounded that institutional investors are notoriously short‐sighted when it comes to making their investment decisions. Faced with performance assessment on a monthly if not daily basis, institutional investors need to show timely results and hence may be under considerable pressure to improve short‐term payoff at the expense of long‐term performance. Because institutions today now own more than 50% of corporate equity, they wield an increasingly powerful influence on companies. This influence has recently been magnified with the emergence of activist institutions, lead by certain institutional investors such as CALPERS or TIAA‐CREF. As a result, there have been concerns among stakeholder groups and scholars that company decision makers will themselves yield to pressures to forego investments in longer‐term opportunities.
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1 December 1995
This article was originally published in
Management Research News
Review Article|
December 01 1995
ATTRACTION OR REPULSION: HOW INSTITUTIONAL OWNERS REACT TO CORPORATE SOCIAL PERFORMANCE
Sandra A. Waddock;
Sandra A. Waddock
The Wallace E. Carroll School of Management, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA 02167
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Samuel B. Graves
Samuel B. Graves
SThe Wallace E. Carroll School of Management, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA 02167
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-6135
Print ISSN: 0140-9174
© MCB UP Limited
1995
Management Research News (1995) 18 (12): 20–24.
Citation
Waddock SA, Graves SB (1995), "ATTRACTION OR REPULSION: HOW INSTITUTIONAL OWNERS REACT TO CORPORATE SOCIAL PERFORMANCE". Management Research News, Vol. 18 No. 12 pp. 20–24, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb028430
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