Posts Tagged ‘Retention’

Why Do CEOs Survive Corporate Storms?

Posted by R. Christopher Small, Co-editor, HLS Forum on Corporate Governance and Financial Regulation, on Friday January 27, 2012 at 9:51 am
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Editor’s Note: The following post comes to us from Messod Daniel Beneish, Professor of Accounting at Indiana University Bloomington; Cassandra Marshall of the Department of Finance at the University of Richmond, and Jun Yang of the Department of Finance at Indiana University Bloomington.

In our paper Why Do CEOs Survive Corporate Storms? Collusive Directors, Costly Replacement, and Legal Jeopardy, which was recently made publicly available on SSRN, we consider new explanations for the puzzling result that a majority of misreporting CEOs retain their jobs.  We extend the literature by investigating the role of directors’ both personal and reputational incentives in the CEO retention decision.  Overall, our analysis improves our understanding of the CEO retention decision by 30 to 40% relative to a benchmark model based on the severity of the misreporting, the firm’s performance and risk characteristics, and traditional measures of the strength of corporate governance.

We show that two types of personal benefits make conventionally independent directors less likely to remove CEOs: loss avoidance on equity-contingent wealth and increased compensation. First, we find that in firms where independent directors emulate CEOs’ trading behavior and also engage in abnormal insider selling over the misreporting period, CEOs are 13.6% more likely to be retained.  We view independent directors’ trading as suggestive of collusion because, like CEOs and other executive directors, they personally benefit by selling their equity at inflated prices during the period over which earnings are misreported.  To the extent that the misreporting sustains the firm’s overvaluation, the fact that directors engage in abnormal selling suggests they have access to negative information about the firm that they do not reveal to shareholders.  We posit that independent directors prefer not to attract attention to their own abnormal selling.  Thus, even though dismissing the CEO could enhance shareholder value by restoring credibility, directors whose trading actions align with those of CEOs have weaker incentives to replace the CEO.

…continue reading: Why Do CEOs Survive Corporate Storms?

CEO Turnover and Retention Light

Posted by R. Christopher Small, Co-editor, HLS Forum on Corporate Governance and Financial Regulation, on Friday September 17, 2010 at 9:06 am
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Editor’s Note: The following post comes to us from John Evans, Professor of Accounting at the University of Pittsburgh; Nandu Nagarajan, Professor of Business Administration at the University of Pittsburgh; and Jason Schloetzer of the Accounting Department at Georgetown University.

In the paper, CEO Turnover and Retention Light: Retaining Former CEOs on the Board, forthcoming in the Journal of Accounting Research, unlike prior CEO turnover literature which characterizes the board’s decision as a choice between retaining versus replacing the CEO, we focus instead on the CEO’s decision rights and introduce a third option in which the incumbent CEO is removed but retained on the board for an extended period. We call this Retention Light.

Firms may benefit from Retention Light because former CEOs possess unique monitoring and advising abilities, but the former CEO could also exploit available decision rights for personal benefit. A Retention Light CEO’s decision rights generally exceed those of CEOs who exit the firm entirely but fall short of the rights of a retained CEO.

…continue reading: CEO Turnover and Retention Light

 
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