What are the advantages and disadvantages for the retailers when the directors of a company own majority of the shares.
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When directors, founders, or promoters own a large majority of a company’s shares, it changes the balance of power inside the company. For retail investors, this can be both a major advantage and a major risk. Using Nigerian examples like Zenith Bank Plc, BUA Cement Plc, or Dangote Cement Plc can heRead more
When directors, founders, or promoters own a large majority of a company’s shares, it changes the balance of power inside the company. For retail investors, this can be both a major advantage and a major risk.
See lessUsing Nigerian examples like Zenith Bank Plc, BUA Cement Plc, or Dangote Cement Plc can help illustrate how strong insider ownership affects investors.
Advantages for Retail Investors
1. Directors’ interests are aligned with shareholders
If directors own a lot of shares, their wealth rises or falls with the company.
That means they are more likely to:
Focus on profitability
Protect the company’s reputation
Think long term instead of chasing short-term hype
A director with 40–80% ownership suffers personally if the company performs badly.
2. Strong long-term vision
Founder-led or insider-controlled companies often:
Expand patiently
Reinvest profits wisely
Avoid unnecessary risks
This is why some companies with dominant founders grow aggressively over many years.
Retail investors may benefit from:
Capital appreciation
Consistent dividends
Stability during economic crises
3. Faster decision-making
When ownership is concentrated:
Major decisions can be taken quickly
Management conflict is reduced
Execution may become stronger
Companies with scattered ownership sometimes move slowly because too many interests must agree.
4. Reduced chance of hostile takeover
Large insider ownership protects the company from outsiders trying to seize control cheaply.
This can preserve:
Corporate culture
Strategic direction
Long-term plans
5. Confidence signal to the market
Heavy insider ownership can signal:
“Management believes strongly in this business.”
Many investors see this as a positive sign.
If directors are continually buying shares instead of selling, it often improves market confidence.
Disadvantages for Retail Investors
1. Retail investors may have almost no influence
This is the biggest issue.
If directors control:
60%
70%
80%+
then ordinary shareholders usually cannot influence:
Voting outcomes
Board appointments
Major resolutions
Even if all retail investors disagree, directors can still pass decisions.
2. Risk of abuse of minority shareholders
Some controlling insiders may:
Approve excessive salaries
Favor related companies
Suppress minority interests
Make decisions that benefit themselves first
This is called a minority shareholder risk.
Good corporate governance becomes extremely important here.
3. Lower liquidity in the stock market
If insiders hold most shares, fewer shares remain available for public trading.
This can cause:
Low trading volume
Price manipulation risk
Difficulty buying or selling quickly
Stocks with low “free float” can become volatile.
4. Possibility of price control or artificial stability
When insiders dominate ownership:
Share prices may not fully reflect real demand/supply
Prices can remain artificially stable
Sudden movements can happen when insiders sell
Retail investors may misjudge the true market value.
5. Resistance to change
Powerful directors may ignore:
New ideas
Shareholder concerns
Needed reforms
Even when performance weakens, removing management becomes difficult.
What Retail Investors Should Watch Carefully
Before investing in companies with strong insider ownership, check:
Corporate governance quality
Look for:
Independent directors
Transparent reporting
Clean audit history
Respect for minority shareholders
Dividend history
Some insider-led firms reward shareholders very well.
Others retain profits endlessly while minorities gain little.
Free float percentage
The Nigerian Exchange often requires a minimum public float.
Low free float can affect liquidity.
Insider buying vs insider selling
Consistent insider buying → often positive
Heavy insider selling → may be warning sign
Balanced Reality
High director ownership is not automatically good or bad.
It becomes:
Good when management is competent, transparent, and shareholder-friendly.
Dangerous when governance is weak and minorities are ignored.
Some of the world’s best-performing companies were built by dominant founders. Some of the worst shareholder abuses also happened in insider-controlled firms.
For a beginner investor, the key lesson is:
Never look only at who owns the shares. Also examine how they treat minority shareholders over time.