Equity
holdings of family firms represent an important form of company ownership in South-East Asia. In order to enhance the effectiveness of corporate governance,listed companies have been required to disclose more
information on their director and officer insurance (hereafter D&O
insurance) purchases in Taiwan. This publicly available data enables this
study to investigate how family firms react to litigation risks in terms of
their D&O insurance. Using the D&O insurance coverage of Taiwan firms as
a proxy for management legal liability coverage, this study made two major findings. First, firms with a high
concentration of family ownership face lower litigations risk and are less
likely to purchase D&O insurance. However, firms with significant
controlling-minority shareholder agency conflicts are more willing to purchase
D&O insurance due to the entrenchment effect. Second, family firms with
Type II agency problems tend to carry abnormally high D&O insurance
coverage. Furthermore, I find that family firms with outside CEOs exhibit a
greater likelihood of purchasing D&O insurance. These findings suggest that
the decision of family firms to purchase or not purchase D&O insurance is
primarily driven by Type II agency problems and the types of CEOs they have in
place.
JEL classification numbers: M41 Keywords: Director and Officer
Liability insurance, Family firms, Litigation risk