In the wake of recent financial crises and corporate failures, chief executive officers (CEOs) are often blamed for their overconfidence leading to earnings manipulation and excessive risks. Why is it then that these overconfident CEOs obtain job offers in the first place? This paper presents a novel explanation for the co-existence of CEO overconfidence and earnings manipulation observed in practice. In an agency model with an external capital market, I identify two potential reasons for a board to hire an overconfident CEO and design a contract that accommodates earnings manipulation: an internal motive, directed at maximizing the ex ante firm value, and an external motive, directed at enhancing the interim market valuation of the firm. T...
This paper investigates whether maintaining a reputation for consistently beating analysts’ earnings...
Past research shows that a heuristic bias push executives to make more mergers and acquisitions, eve...
Previous empirical work on adverse consequences of CEO overconfidence raises the question of why fir...
This dissertation studies the multiple roles of chief executive officers (CEOs) and financial inform...
By using the data of firms listed on the three major US stock exchanges—the New York Stock Exchange,...
This thesis investigates the effects of Chief Financial Officer (CFO) overconfidence on corporate de...
This paper investigates the impact of CEO overconfidence on the probability of corporate bankruptcy....
This study explores the relationship between overconfident Chief Financial Officers (CFOs) and earni...
In this paper, we provide a theoretical and empirical framework that allows us to synthesize and ass...
This paper explores the influence of institutional investors’ external monitoring on CEOs’ overconfi...
Cash holding is on average more valuable when firms are managed by overconfident CEOs. Economically,...
Synthesizing agency theory and prospect theory, we examined the effects of stock-based incentives on...
Does CEO overconfidence help to explain merger decisions? Overconfident CEOs over-estimate their abi...
Overconfident CEOs are known to overestimate their ability to generate returns, overpay for target fir...
This study extends our understanding of CEO inside debt compensation under an agency problem perspec...
This paper investigates whether maintaining a reputation for consistently beating analysts’ earnings...
Past research shows that a heuristic bias push executives to make more mergers and acquisitions, eve...
Previous empirical work on adverse consequences of CEO overconfidence raises the question of why fir...
This dissertation studies the multiple roles of chief executive officers (CEOs) and financial inform...
By using the data of firms listed on the three major US stock exchanges—the New York Stock Exchange,...
This thesis investigates the effects of Chief Financial Officer (CFO) overconfidence on corporate de...
This paper investigates the impact of CEO overconfidence on the probability of corporate bankruptcy....
This study explores the relationship between overconfident Chief Financial Officers (CFOs) and earni...
In this paper, we provide a theoretical and empirical framework that allows us to synthesize and ass...
This paper explores the influence of institutional investors’ external monitoring on CEOs’ overconfi...
Cash holding is on average more valuable when firms are managed by overconfident CEOs. Economically,...
Synthesizing agency theory and prospect theory, we examined the effects of stock-based incentives on...
Does CEO overconfidence help to explain merger decisions? Overconfident CEOs over-estimate their abi...
Overconfident CEOs are known to overestimate their ability to generate returns, overpay for target fir...
This study extends our understanding of CEO inside debt compensation under an agency problem perspec...
This paper investigates whether maintaining a reputation for consistently beating analysts’ earnings...
Past research shows that a heuristic bias push executives to make more mergers and acquisitions, eve...
Previous empirical work on adverse consequences of CEO overconfidence raises the question of why fir...