We present a multiperiod agency model of stock-based executive compensation in a speculative stock market, where investors have heterogeneous beliefs and stock prices may deviate from underlying fundamentals and include a speculative option component. This component arises from the option to sell the stock in the future to potentially overoptimistic investors. We show that optimal compensation contracts may emphasize short-term stock performance, at the expense of long-run fundamental value, as an incentive to induce managers to pursue actions which increase the speculative component in the stock price. Our model provides a different perspective on the recent corporate crisis than the “rent extraction view ” of executive compensation. 1
In recent years, literature has suggested that executive compensation schemes conform to principal-a...
This dissertation consists of three chapters that examine the association between speculative tradin...
Classic financial agency theory recommends compensation through stock options rather than shares to ...
We present a multiperiod agency model of stock based executive compensation in a speculative stock m...
This paper presents a model of optimal executive compensation in a setting where managers are in a p...
We argue that the root cause behind the recent corporate scandals associated with CEO pay is the tec...
This dissertation analyzes existing managerial and employee compensation schemes in the light of rec...
Research on executive compensation has been unable to explain the vast use of executive stock option...
We propose a new continuous-time principal-agent model to study the optimal timing of stock-based in...
This dissertation analyzes the effect of a stock market downturn on executive compensation plans wh...
The use of stock-based compensation, as a solution to agency problems between share-holders and mana...
Prior theoretical and empirical research has shown that disagreement can cause speculative trading w...
We show that a possible explanation for the widespread use of options in compensation contracts migh...
We study a stock-based executive (CEO) compensation contract for the case where the insider receives...
One role of stock options in executive compensation packages is to counterbalance the inherently sho...
In recent years, literature has suggested that executive compensation schemes conform to principal-a...
This dissertation consists of three chapters that examine the association between speculative tradin...
Classic financial agency theory recommends compensation through stock options rather than shares to ...
We present a multiperiod agency model of stock based executive compensation in a speculative stock m...
This paper presents a model of optimal executive compensation in a setting where managers are in a p...
We argue that the root cause behind the recent corporate scandals associated with CEO pay is the tec...
This dissertation analyzes existing managerial and employee compensation schemes in the light of rec...
Research on executive compensation has been unable to explain the vast use of executive stock option...
We propose a new continuous-time principal-agent model to study the optimal timing of stock-based in...
This dissertation analyzes the effect of a stock market downturn on executive compensation plans wh...
The use of stock-based compensation, as a solution to agency problems between share-holders and mana...
Prior theoretical and empirical research has shown that disagreement can cause speculative trading w...
We show that a possible explanation for the widespread use of options in compensation contracts migh...
We study a stock-based executive (CEO) compensation contract for the case where the insider receives...
One role of stock options in executive compensation packages is to counterbalance the inherently sho...
In recent years, literature has suggested that executive compensation schemes conform to principal-a...
This dissertation consists of three chapters that examine the association between speculative tradin...
Classic financial agency theory recommends compensation through stock options rather than shares to ...