20. arm’s length
– «на расстоянии вытянутой руки» (21. free float
– число акций в свободном обращении на рынке22. capital gains
– приращение капитала23. stock exchange
– фондовая биржа24. volatility
volatile
25. principal
26. collusion
collude
27. bribe
bribe
28. pay packet
– заработок, фонд заработной платы29. tax burden
– налоговое бремя30. Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
– валовой внутренний продукт (ВВП)31. International Monetary Fund (IMF)
– Международный валютный фонд (МВФ)32. malfeasance
33. coercion
coerce
coercive
34. insider trading
– внутренняя (инсайдерская) торговляExercise 1. Answer the following questions.
1. Who is responsible for the day-to-day running of the company? 2. Why did shareholders play a passive role in the affairs of their company in the past? 3. How has shareholding changed recently? 4. How can institutional shareholders influence the affairs of a company? 5. What is the essence of the agency problem? 6. What does the agency theory state? 7. Why might managers do their best to improve the financial performance of their company? 8. Why is the difference in risk attitudes of managers and shareholders? 9. What are the potential sources of conflicts between managers and shareholders? 10. What types of incentives might encourage managers to act in shareholders’ best interests? 11. Why is it believed that managers will always steal from the company they run? 12. Why do shareholders cooperate with corporate robbery? 13. What is the paramount interest of both shareholders and managers? 14. In what way does the Principal-Agent Problem arise in other social interactions? 15. Do you agree with the macroeconomic views of Sam Vaknin, the author of the second text?
Exercise 2*. Find terms in the text that match definitions given below and make sentences of your using these terms.
1. to assume control or ownership; to seize by force or craft
2. one who is not connected with or admitted to a particular association, set or group
3. an undertaking of chance, danger, or hazard, esp. a commercial speculation
4. an association of brokers or dealers in stocks and bonds who trade securities among themselves
5. fickle, apt to change, lively
6. secret agreement for a deceitful or fraudulent purposes, esp. between persons pretending to be adversaries or competitors
7. to induce to a certain course of action, esp. to a wrong course, by the gift or offer of something valued
8. changed from the natural character or original simplicity
Exercise 3. Analyze the potential for conflict between managers and shareholders in Russian companies. Describe a corporate conflict that has happened in Russia.
Exercise 4*. Fill in the blanks using terms given below.
The Boss on the Sidelines
How Auditors, Directors and Lawyers Are Asserting their Power
If anybody needed proof that the…… in Corporate America has……… Maurice R. Greenberg…….. it on March 13. While the imperious chairman and CEO of American International Group Inc. was aboard his yacht on the Florida coast, his company’s……. directors faced an urgent crisis: a growing……. that seemed to lead straight to the CEO. As directors debated whether to cut Greenberg loose, the 79-year-old titan lashed out at them by telephone: «This board is being….. by a bunch of lawyers who can’t spell the word ‘insurance’! If you get rid of me, you will……. this company!» It was the kind of intimidation that had helped Greenberg….. unprecedented power in his four decades at the…….. of the insurer. But this time, the bullying didn’t work. Within a day, Greenberg, once the most powerful man in the industry, was out as CEO.