Title: Executive Incentives
1Chapter 2
2Chapter overview
- Potential Managerial Temptations
- Types of Executive Compensation
- Does Incentive-based Compensation Work in
General? - Potential Incentive Problems with
Incentive-based Compensation - Other Compensation
- Crime and Punishment
- International Perspective-CEO Compensation Around
the World
3Potential Managerial Temptations
- A good manager should put the needs of other
stakeholders before his own. - However, if shareholders cannot effectively
monitor managers behavior, then managers may be
tempted to put his needs first, even at the
expenses of shareholders.
4Examples of Self-serving Managerial Actions
- Shirking (i.e. not working hard)
- Hiring friends
- Consuming excessive perks
- Building empires
- Taking no risks or chances to avoid being fired
- Having a short-run horizon if the managers is
near retirement
5Types of Executive Compensation
- The base salary is usually determined through
the benchmarking method. - At the end of every year, CEOs often receive
cash bonuses whose size is computed based on the
performance of the firm over the past year. - Comparison of awarding bonuses with giving large
raises.
6Types of Executive Compensation (continued)
- Executive stock optionsthe most common form of
market-oriented incentive pay. - Stock options give the executive of the firm the
incentive to manage the firm. - Stock options are believed to align managers
goals with shareholders goals. - Stock options have asymmetric incentives
7Stock Option
- Stock options favorable tax treatment for both
the executive and the company - Accounting cost and economic cost
- FAS 123(R)
8Types of Executive Compensation (continued)
- An alternative form of long-term incentive
compensation that avoids governance failure - Restricted stock does not have asymmetric
incentives - Performance shares can be viewed as bonuses for
past realized performance.
9Does Incentive-based Compensation Work in General?
- Two ways to examine the efficacy of
incentive-based compensation
- ex post evidence, pay-for-performance
sensitivity - ex ante evidence
10Potential Incentive Problems with
Incentive-based Compensation
- Problems with Accounting-Based Incentives
- Forego costly research and development that
might be beneficial to the firm - Accounting profits may be manipulated
- CEOs may place too much focus on manipulating
short-term earnings
11Problems with Stock Option Incentives
- CEOs might forego increasing dividends in favor
of using the cash to try to increase the stock
price - CEOs have a tendency to pick a higher risk
business strategy - Stock options may be too far underwater to
motivate the manager effectively - CEOs may try to do what they can to time stock
price movements to match the time horizons of
their stock options
12Another Problem with Executive Stock Options
- Stock prices are affected by company performance
but also by many other factors beyond its control - Repricing previously issued options may let
options lose their effectiveness
13Real-World Examples
- Disney CEO Michael Eisner
- Stock options create the possibility that
only short-term value will be created, not
long-term value - Managements Behavior at Xerox
- Managers may manipulate accounting profits
14Example Xerox Corporation
15Expensing Executive Options An Easy Solution?
- Expensing executive optionthe cost of stock
options issued to employees and executives should
be treated as an expense on the granting firms
financial statements. - Three reasons of expensing executive options
- To have better disclosure and account for the
real cost of using options as compensation - To reduce the amount of options executives
receive and reduce their total compensation - To reduce CEOs incentive to time the market
16Other Compensation
- Club membership, financial advisors, luxury cars
and chauffeurs, personal travel, etc. - Retirement compensation
- Company loan
17Crime and Punishment
- An alternative way to solve the agency-problem is
to increase the penalty - The new Sarbanes-Oxley Act
18International Perspective-CEO Compensation Around
the World
19Summary
- Stock and option incentives are believed to solve
agency-problem - However, whether or not the incentives work
results in much debate - If incentive compensation is imperfect, then
monitors are needed.