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16 Eur. Bus. Org. L. Rev. 1 (2015)

handle is hein.journals/eunbuioiz16 and id is 1 raw text is: 


Eur Bus Org Law Rev (2015) 16:1 37
DOI 10.1007/s40804-015-0001-3
\  I 1 1 1



Related Party Transactions: Policy Options
and   Real-World Challenges (with a Critique
of  the  European Commission Proposal)


Luca  Enriques





Published online: 10 March 2015
© T.M.C. Asser Press 2015


Abstract This   paper provides a legal and policy analysis of transactions between a
corporation and one of its 'related parties'. It first highlights the reasons why related
party transactions (RPTs) are so common  around the world. Next, it better identifies
the phenomenon as   a specific form of potentially abusive behaviour by  dominant
shareholders and  managers, i.e., as an instrument for tunneling, asking why many
jurisdictions provide for specific regulations on RPTs in addition to general rules or
standards on tunneling. Then, it describes the main legal tools available to prevent
corporate agents from  diverting value from  the corporation via RPTs.  Further, it
provides a (partially) critical assessment of the measures put forth by the European
Commission   to harmonise  rules on  RPTs  within the EU,  based  on the previous
analysis of individual legal tools. Finally, it shows that no regulation of RPTs (or
tunneling) can  succeed  in preventing minority  shareholder expropriation  in the
absence  of sophisticated enforcement actors (specialised courts and/or active and
committed   securities regulators) and non-legal supporting institutions, like inde-
pendent  financial media and anti-tunneling social norms.

Keywords     Corporate  governance  - Dominant shareholders  - Corporate groups
Private benefits of control - Tunneling Related party transactions - Self-dealing
Conflict of interests - MOM  approval  Independent  directors - Mandatory

I wish to thank John Armour, Andris Hanik, Merritt Fox, Ron Gilson, Zohar Goshen, Michael Klausner,
Georg Ringe, Chuck Whitehead and especially Amir Licht and Alessio Pacces for their comments on an
earlier draft. Fianna Jurdant and Nadia Zainuddin provided useful information on Asian reforms focusing
on related party transactions. Usual disclaimers apply. Throughout this paper, by 'companies' are meant
listed companies unless the context shows otherwise; correspondingly, the description of legal rules in a
given jurisdiction justifies no inference on what its rules for non-listed companies are. A shorter version
of this paper will be published in Gordon and Ringe (2015).

L. Enriques (E)
Oxford Law Faculty, University of Oxford and ECGI, St. Cross Building, St. Cross Road,
Oxford OXI 3UL, UK
e-mail: luca.enriques@law.ox.ac.uk


I  Springer 0  ASSER PRES;

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