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Executive Incentives

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Chapter 2 Executive Incentives Chapter overview Potential Managerial Temptations Types of Executive Compensation Does Incentive-based Compensation Work in General? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Executive Incentives


1
Chapter 2
  • Executive Incentives

2
Chapter 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

3
Potential 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.

4
Examples 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

5
Types of Executive Compensation
  • Base Salary and Bonus
  • 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.

6
Types of Executive Compensation (continued)
  • Stock Option
  • 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

7
Stock Option
  • Options and Accounting
  • Stock options favorable tax treatment for both
    the executive and the company
  • Accounting cost and economic cost
  • FAS 123(R)

8
Types of Executive Compensation (continued)
  • Stock Grants
  • 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.

9
Does 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

10
Potential 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

11
Problems 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

12
Another 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

13
Real-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

14
Example Xerox Corporation
15
Expensing 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

16
Other Compensation
  • Club membership, financial advisors, luxury cars
    and chauffeurs, personal travel, etc.
  • Retirement compensation
  • Company loan

17
Crime and Punishment
  • An alternative way to solve the agency-problem is
    to increase the penalty
  • The new Sarbanes-Oxley Act

18
International Perspective-CEO Compensation Around
the World
19
Summary
  • 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.
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