Recap Lecture Week 7
What is at the heart of capital structure choices?
information asymmetry
close link between firm characteristics (size, risk, life-cycle, profitability etc.) & its capital structure choices
What are the two main schools of thoughts on capital structure choices? Name examples for each
1) Irrelevance theories: Capital structure is irrelevant to firm value
2) Relevance theories: Capital structure is relevant to firm value
Trade-off theory
Pecking order theory
Market timing theory
Wnat are the two key approaches to govern the firm?
1) Carrot: Reward CEOs with money for “good” performance
2) Stick: Threaten to punish CEOs for “bad” performance
What are the two key governance mechanisms?
1) Internal: the board of directors & large institutional owners
2) External: threats of takeover & threats of product markets
How is a company structured/ in what 2 parts is a company seperated ?
1) Owners (ownership)
2) Managers (control)
Define the Agency theory/ problem
Agency problem refers to difficulties that financiers have in assuring that their funds are not expropriated or wasted on unattractive projects (Shleifer and Vishny, 1997)
Why do managers have significant residual right of control and what does this implicate?
because of incomplete contracts
—> moral hazard
Define the interests of managers and shareholders
Shareholders want CEO to maximize wealth
CEO wants: job security, publicity, money, career prospects etc.
—> divergent interests between managers and shareholders
What is the aim of corporate governance?
align interests of owners & managers
What types of agency behavior exist and how are they characterized?
2 + 1
1) Managerial risk aversion
risk averse CEOs: Forego risky but high NPV projects —> common in reality
—> need a governance mechanism to motivate these CEOs to work harder
2) Managerial unethical behavior
reckless & fraudulent CEOs
—> need a governance mechanism to punish these CEOs for bad behavior
There is NO “one-size-fits-all” governance!
What other stakeholders does corporate governance also deal with?
e.g.
employees
consumers
suppliers
general public
Name some prominent cases of misconduct
1) Enron: accounting misconduct
2) Wells Fargo: created fake consumer accounts
3) Primark: used child labor
Name and explain the different governance objectives
3
1) governance by maximizing shareholder interests
making sure CEOs act in shareholders’ best interests
2) governance by ensuring equitable treatment of all shareholders
foreign and domestic shareholders should receive the same treatment
major and minor shareholders should receive the same treatment
3) governance by maximizing stakeholder interests
making sure employees, suppliers, customers, the environments and the society are protected
Explain the difference between shareholders and stakeholders
1) Shareholders: someone who holds shares of the company
2) Stakeholder: someone who is involved in or affected by a project
Name and define the two key approaches to govern the firm
1) Carrot
Reward CEOs with money for “good” performance
2) Stick
Threaten to punish CEOs for “bad” performance
When considering the carrot approach:
What are the three levels of thinking about CEO compensation?
What is aim of CEO compensation?
L1: Pay level
L2: Performance - pay sensitivity
L3: Pay structure
CEO compensation incentivizes managers to take effort
Carrot approach
Level 1 thinking: Pay level
1) How much of market capitalization of a firm accounts for CEOs annual pay?
2) Does focusing on pay levels help aling interests between managers and owners?
3) What did the study by “ de Ree, Muralidharan, Pradhan & Rogers (QIE 2018): Indonesia doubles teacher pay at experimented schools to encourage efforts” find?
1) Fact: CEOs account for 91% of a frims investment policies. Their annual pay is 0.05% of the firm’s market capitalization
2) focusing on pay level does not align the interests between managers & owners
3)
the teachers are happier, BUT
remain equally lazy —> pay rise has NO effects on student’s learning experience, test scores, or success
What are CEO compensations important for?
Does focusing only on pay levels help?
CEO compensation is an important mechanism to reduce agency costs
focus on only pay levels is misplaced
Considering Level 2 thinking: Sensitivity of Pay:
1) What is the main idea of sensitivity of pay?
2) How does it work?
3) are there disadvantages of using pay-performance sensitivity?
1) What it is? Make CEO pay sensitive to firm’s performance
2) How it works? Pay the CEO with the firm’s stock instead of cash
CEOs will work harder to increase share prices to gain higher compensation
pay-performance sensitivity is a powerful way to cut CEO slack
3) Disadvantages/ dark side
Edmans, Fang and Lewellen (RFS 2017): CEOs reduce investments (R&D, CAPEX) to inflate stock prices when they need to redeem their shares
Burns & Kedia (JFE 2008): Sensitive pay is linked to accounting misconduct
According to a study by Frydman and Jenter (2010):
What are the trends in pay components?
firms increasinly pay CEOs with more incentive-based compensation
What does level 3 thinking consist of?
Pay structure
pay duration AND
pay ratio
Considering level 3 thinking:
what can you say about the pay duration (period) ?
Pay duration (period):
whether number of shares that a CEO receives is based on short- or long-term
powerful way to align the CEO with short-or long-term value
When considering level 3 thinking:
What is the pay policy for Elon Mask and what does this implicate?
Elon-Musk pay policies: Tesla’s market value Must exceed $100 billion by 2028, otherwise Musk receives nothing:
Encourages Musk to focus on very long-term value creation policies (10 years)
suits Tesla as it has a huge growth potential
-> may not be suitable for other firms
Carrot approach - Level 3 thinking
What is the CEO-worker pay ratio?
The CEO pay ratio compares the overall compensation of the CEO to that of the typical employee
CEO pay ratio is computed by dividing the CEOs remuneration by the median employees remuneration
What are the academic facts about the CEO pay gap?
4
1) firms with a greater CEO-worker pay ratio perform better (Mueller, Ouiment, Simintzi, 2017)
2) von Wachter (2017): Larger pay gap is linked to a) higher employee productivity & b) riskier firm policies, for c) innovative & complex firms
3) Kale et al. (2009): Larger pay gap between CEO and other executives contributes to better firm performances in US (Tournament effect)
4) Kini and Williams (2012): Higher tournament incentives lead to greater risk taking
Name the two key takeways about CEO compensation
1) CEO compensation is a power means to reduce agency conflicts & encourage CEO effort
—> as long as you know how to pay…
2) What matter in CEO pay is not how much you pay, but how you pay it
Describe the “Stick” theory as a method of corporate governance?
CEO turnover (=CEO Wechsel)
replace CEO for poor performance
(Jensen & Murphy, 1990): negative realtionship between firm performance & likelihood of CEO turnover
-> Negative relationship (one variable increases as the other decreases and vice versa)
What are the three key corporate governance mechanisms?
1) The Bord of Directors
2) Large shareholders
3) Other external mechanisms
Define the term “board of directors”
A group of individulas that are elected as representatives of the shareholders to ensure that the CEO acts in shareholder’s best interest
What are the key roles of the “board of directors”?
1) monitor and
2) give advice to the CEO (on behalf of shareholders)
What does a board of directors typically include?
Chairman
Outside directors/ Independent directors
Inside directors (e.g. executives, representatives of large shareholders…)
—> Executive directors and non-executive directors
Board of directors
What are independent directors and what does their status enable them to do?
Independent/ outside directors are those that are independent from the firm’s CEO (management), i.e., they do not have any family connection, commercial or financial relationship with the CEO (management)
being “independent” from the CEO allows these directors to objectively monitor the CEO
A board of directors that is independent from the CEO is a hallmark of a well-functioning corporate governance
Around what four committees is the board of directors oragnised?
1) Nominating: Hire & fire CEOs
2) Compensation: Pay CEOs
3) Audit: Accounting & Auditing policies
4) Risk (optional)
WHat are the features of a “good” board / bord independence?
consists of at least 50% outside directors
All members of nomintating & compensation committee must be outside directors
According to “Beasley, M.S., 1996, An Empirical Analysis of the Realtion between the Board of Director Composition and Financial Statement Fraud, The Accounting Review”
What are the benefits of board independence?
Key finding: porbability of fraud is lower when the board is more independet
What is the Enron accounting scandal ?
Enron:
one of the world’s leading electricity, natural gas, communications and pulp and paper companies
America’s “Most Innovative Company” for 6 years by Fortune
2000 staff; $101 billion claimed revenue in 2000
Accounting Scandal:
in 2001 it was discovered that many of Enron’s recorded assets and profits were inflated or even wholly fraudulent and non-existent
scanal caused the dissolution of its auditor, Arthur Andersen
Considering the Enron Accounting Scandal:
What is the so called “Enron’s irony” ?
What did board indepence have to do with the scanal?
The Enron’s irony:
board of Enron in 2001: 14 out of 17 members are independent directors
Its audit committee is fully independent & is chaired by a Stanford accounting professor
Some “independent” directors on Enron boards:
received charitable donantions from Enron
bought assets from Enron
received $72.000 for their advice
—> independent directors are not “truly” independent
Name three of the many factors that can compromise director independence
Implication
when they are college buddies with the CEO
when they used to work in the same firm with the CEO
when they owe the CEO a favor, e.g., for recommending her to join the board
—> According to: “Coles, Daniel, Naveen (2014, RFS) and Khanna, Kim, and Lu (2015, JF) the above factors lead to reduced monitoring and increased fraud
Implication:
it is difficult to achieve a “perfect” corporate governance in practice!
Name the two main takeaways about board independence
1) board independence is the hallmark of a healthy corporate governance
2) due to various factors (outsiders with heterogeneous background, private incentives, social influence), it is difficult to achieve true board independence in practice
How does Board diversity affect the outcomes of a firm?
Demographic composition (e.g., Gender age, nationality…) of board of directors matters to firm outcomes (e.g. performance/ risks/ policies)
Name one benefit and one cost of board dieversity
Benefit: Generate higher creativity, innovation and boost decision-making quality
Cost: Generate conflicts and distract decision making process
What does the literature say about board diversity?
1) Adams and Ferreira (JFE 2009): Gender-diverse boards allocate more efforts to monitoring the firm
2) Bernile, Bhagwat and Yonker (JFE 2018): Diverse boards adopt more persistent and less risky financial policies; reduce stock volatility; have more efficient and innovative investment
3) Oleksandr, Yin and Zhang (IRFA 2018): Board age diversity generates conflicts due to different personal values and weakens bank performance
What can you say about Large Shareholders?
2
1) Large institutional investors often own shares of many firms in several different industries
2) they are actively involved in the day-to-day activities of the firm by:
(Voice) Forcefully replace the CEO of the board of directors
(Exit) Threaten to sell the firm’s shares
What are the country differences in large shareholding?
US: less common
Germany: large commercial banks
Most of Europe (e.g. Italy, Finland, Sweden), as well as Latin America, East Asia, and Africa: common
According to “Kempf, Manconi, & Splat, RFS 2017, Distracted shareholders & corporate actions” :
1) What happend if large shareholders of a firm are distracted?
2) What are the implications?
1)
CEO of that firm are 53% more likely to engage in “pointless” mergers to build up their empire -> these mergers destroy an average of $1.67 billion of firm value
In addition, these CEOs are
a) less likely to be fired for having poor performance
b) more likely to cut dividends
c) more likely to grant themselves options rewards
2) Implications:
Large shareholders are important governance mechanism
when the cat is away, the mice will eat your money!
What “other extermal mechanisms” act as corporate governance mechanisms?
1) threats of being taken over
2) product market competition
Define the “threat of being taken over” and its implications
if CEO does not efficiently utilise the firm’s resources to generate shareholder wealth, some other companies will try to forcefully buy it via a hostile takeover & try to repalce the CEO
-> also a governance mechanism
hostile takeovers impose significant distress not just on ly to the CEO but also to other stakeholders (e.g. employees, suppliers, customers)
-> many US states passed laws in the late 1980s to restrict it
Threats of being taken over
What happens if CEOs are insluated (=isoliert) from takeovers?
worker wages [especially for those of white-collar workers (=Angestellen)] rise
overall productivity and porfitability decline
less creation of new plants
less destruction of old plants
How do external meachanisms (e.g. product market competition) act as an important governance mechanism?
Two industires: Industry A only has 1 monopoly; Industry B has 10 firms basically selling the same product
Obviously, CEOs of frims in industry B are under greater pressure to get their things right
suppliers & customers in industry B will be able to tell which firm sell high-quality products
investors in industry B will be able to tell what constitutes “appropriate” profitability
-> governance problems are more sever for firms in industry A
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