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in the individual parents have conflicting interests. The separate identities of DLCs often cause underrepresentation in value-weighted stock indexes because only one of the pair's market capitalization is considered. Although efficient capital markets suggest that twin share prices should be identical, a corollary of equalization arrangements, historically substantial price deviations occurred and persisted, even for extended periods (Rosenthal and Young 1990). Froot and Dabora (1999) present evidence purporting that DLC stocks exhibit excess comovement with the location at which the shares are traded, irrespective of implied equalization. Furthering this analysis, De Jong, Rosenthal, and van Dijk (2009) explore apparent arbitrage opportunities in 12 pairs of DLCs, determining that market participants cannot easily exploit mispricings due to unique risks of the DLC structure. Finally, equalization and other contractual agreements complicate using the stock as an acquisition currency (FTI Consulting 2018).

      Since the early 2000s through 2019, a noticeable trend toward unification has emerged in the subset of DLCs on the market. Between 1990 and 2019, at least 16 companies were organized as multinational DLCs at some point, but only five remained in 2019: Unilever, Rio Tinto, BHP Billiton, Investec, and Carnival. Indeed, in 2017, activist investor Elliott Associates campaigned for BHP Billiton to unify its Anglo-Australian DLC, arguing that the structure is value destructive given the underperformance of the U.K. company (Elliott Associates 2017).

Schematic illustration of the cross-border dual-listed companies.

      This figure provides a snapshot of 16 (5 current and 11 former) DLCs. While the 1990s experienced a rise in DLC formations, this complicated stock structure has since seemingly fallen out of favor alongside the trend toward “unification” or “simplification” of the corporate structure. Dates shown are the beginning and end dates for the inception and dissolution (if applicable) of the DLC structure.

      Tracking Stock

      A tracking stock is a special type of equity in which a multidivisional corporation issues shares whose value is designed to reflect a specific subsidiary or business unit of the company, rather than the entire enterprise. Other names for these securities are “targeted stock,” “lettered stock,” and “alphabet stock.” A tracking stock's value is intended to mirror the economic results of the subsidiary it targets. Still, tracking stock shareholders are shareholders in the parent corporation rather than in the tracked subsidiary. Therefore, shareholders do not have “direct ownership of the subsidiary to which their cash flows are tied” (Chemmanur and Paeglis 2005, p. 102). Corporations with tracking stocks report financials of the stand-alone business units for the tracking stock groups, reducing information asymmetry between insiders and the market. Although tracking stocks embody separate, tradeable assets, the parent corporation retains legal ownership and control of all assets and cash flows from which the tracking stock purportedly derives its value, suggesting that the intention to reflect subsidiary performance may not indicate economic reality. Tracking stock groups do not have a separate board of directors. Rather, the parent's board of directors sets capital allocation policies for the overall corporation in the interest of the parent, which may conflict with tracking stock group shareholders (Haas 1996).

      Numerous corporate governance issues arise from the absence of legal ownership of assets. For companies with multiple tracking stocks in issue, the lack of a direct claim on assets has an interesting implication. By virtue of the parent's fundamental legal control, the value and price of one tracking stock group within a company may influence other tracking stock groups, despite theoretical independence. The returns for multiple classes of a single company's tracking stock may be interdependent, given the parent's discretion of cash flow allocation (Haas 1999).

      Additionally, though the assets and liabilities are attributed to individual groups, all are ultimately owned and incurred by a consolidated entity. The obligations of any tracking stock group are thus shared by each of the other groups (Haas 1996). Although the earnings attributable to the tracking stock group should determine the dividends available to the group, the board of directors sets dividend policy and may determine to divert funds away from the profitable group toward less profitable groups in the best interest of the corporation as a whole (Logue, Seward, and Walsh 1996).

      Dual-class structures separate economic ownership from control via the difference in voting rights for each share class. This wedge between the degree of economic interest and actual voting power to affect corporate changes has been subject to investor debate. Economic ownership and voting power are intrinsically linked for a single class of equity: one share equals one vote. However, dual-class equity structures give preferential voting rights to one class of stock. Holders of these super-voting classes then retain outsized influence per unit of economic ownership. With a dual-class structure, influence and control instead become independent from an economic interest in the company.

      In

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