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Dr. San Martín-Mosqueira, Pablo
Nombre de publicación
Dr. San Martín-Mosqueira, Pablo
Nombre completo
San Martín Mosqueira, Pablo César
Email
psanmartin@ucsc.cl
ORCID
2 results
Research Outputs
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
- PublicationGroup affiliation and ownership concentration as determinants of capital structure decisions: Contextualizing the facts for an emerging economy(Emerging Markets Finance and Trade, 2018)
;Saona, Pablo; Jara Bertín, MauricioThis study considers the firm’s affiliation with business groups and the ownership structure as determinants of leverage decisions in Chilean firms. The major findings show that group-affiliated firms take advantage of internal capital markets and transactions with related parties (e.g., low transference price or loans at competitive interest rates) that reduces the demand for external debt. Majority shareholders in affiliated firms behave as controllers of managers, on the one hand, and avoid the supervisory role of debt, on the other hand. In stand-alone firms, supervision led by majority shareholders is complemented by the monitoring role of debt through higher levels of leverage. We conclude that further developments in capital structure theories adjusted to the particularities of the different institutional contexts are needed - PublicationChilean pension fund managers and corporate governance: The impact on corporate debt(North American Journal of Economics and Finance, 2019)
;Jara, Mauricio ;López Iturriaga, Félix; ;Saona, PabloTenderini, GianninaIn this paper we analyse the relationship between the investment of Pension Fund Managers (AFPs) and the cost of corporate debt (public and private). Using a sample of 93 non-financial Chilean listed firms between 2009 and 2014, we find that AFPs increase the probability of issuing bonds. Moreover, in line with our crowding out hypothesis, we show that AFPs increase the cost of bank borrowing. In line with the monitoring view, we find that AFPs decrease bond yields. On average, our results suggest that AFPs improve corporate governance by influencing information disclosure and by reducing the intensity of lending relationships with banks.