• @corbs132@lemmy.world
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    31 year ago

    I don’t think your last sentence is congruent with what you were saying before it.

    You’re saying a CEO will opt for conglomeration because it either increases the value or decreases the volatility of the company because the CEO has lots of stock in the company. If that’s the case, how is it bad for the shareholders, of which the CEO is a major player?

    • @Badass_panda@lemmy.world
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      21 year ago

      The shareholders can go and buy a diversified portfolio on their own, by investing in many companies, so they can derisk their portfolio without conglomeration.

      If they already own shares of the conglomerating company, its returns will be lower (they don’t care that it’s less risky; they’ve diversified already). Similarly, the returns of the company that is now becoming part of the conglomeration will likely be reduced, which negatively affects shareholders of that company.

      The benefit is really only for the people whose prospects are deeply tied to this company, and only this company… its management employees, who are compensated by the company (often in the form of stock that they can’t sell till they leave, or that vests over a long time frame).

    • @nednobbins@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      It’s a bit complicated.

      The CEO and the other shareholders aren’t the same.

      For the CEO, it’s a good way to diversify since they can’t diversify the normal way.

      For the regular share holders it’s a way to diversify but it’s not as good as being able to buy and sell the individual components.

      I’ll skip a lot of the math but the upshot is that their Sharpe Ratio (expected return divided by risk) is higher if they do their own diversification than if they buy one company that tries to diversify within it.