| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 7362060 | Journal of Financial Economics | 2018 | 23 Pages | 
Abstract
												Differences in accrued gains and investors' tax-sensitivity induce variation in a capital gains lock-in effect across mutual funds even for the same stock at the same time. Exploiting this variation, we show this effect influences funds' governance decisions: higher capital gains decrease the likelihood a fund exits prior to contentious votes and increase the likelihood a fund votes against management. Consistent with tax motivation, these findings are concentrated among funds with tax-sensitive investors. Further, high aggregate capital gains across funds holding a stock predict a higher likelihood management loses a vote and a lower likelihood a contentious vote is proposed.
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											Authors
												Stephen G. Dimmock, William C. Gerken, Zoran IvkoviÄ, Scott J. Weisbenner, 
											