This paper examines the incentives from stock options for loss-averse employees subject to probability weighting. Employing the certainty equivalence principle, I built on insights from Cumulative Prospect Theory (CPT) to derive a continuous time model to value options from the perspective of a representative employee. Consistent with a growing body of empirical and experimental studies, the model predicts that the employee may overestimate the value of his options in-excess of their risk-neutral value. This is nevertheless in stark contrast with a common finding of standard models based on the Expected Utility Theory (EUT) framework that options value to a riskaverse undiversified employee is strictly lower than the value to risk-neut...
Special Issue on Recent Developments in Decision-Making, Monetary Policy and Financial MarketsIntern...
This paper investigates a market-valuation-based hypothesis for employee stock options (ESOs). It ex...
Classic financial agency theory recommends compensation through stock options rather than shares to...
International audienceThis paper examines the incentives from stock options for loss-averse employee...
International audienceThis paper examines the incentives from stock options for loss-averse employee...
This dissertation analyzes existing managerial and employee compensation schemes in the light of rec...
The use of options as compensation for non-executive employees is a puzzle. Standard, rational, valu...
This paper documents that riskier firms with higher idiosyncratic volatility grant more stock option...
This paper documents that riskier \u85rms grant more stock options to non-executive employees using ...
International audienceThis research provides an alternative framework for the analysis of employee s...
This research provides an alternative framework for the valuation of standard employee stock options...
This thesis focuses on the concept of loss aversion in cumulative prospect theory and applies cumula...
This study empirically investigates the value employees place on stock options using information fro...
I present a model where increasing employee participation in a stock option scheme leads to higher p...
Ce travail, composé de trois essais, se focalise sur la pertinence du cadre descriptif pour la repré...
Special Issue on Recent Developments in Decision-Making, Monetary Policy and Financial MarketsIntern...
This paper investigates a market-valuation-based hypothesis for employee stock options (ESOs). It ex...
Classic financial agency theory recommends compensation through stock options rather than shares to...
International audienceThis paper examines the incentives from stock options for loss-averse employee...
International audienceThis paper examines the incentives from stock options for loss-averse employee...
This dissertation analyzes existing managerial and employee compensation schemes in the light of rec...
The use of options as compensation for non-executive employees is a puzzle. Standard, rational, valu...
This paper documents that riskier firms with higher idiosyncratic volatility grant more stock option...
This paper documents that riskier \u85rms grant more stock options to non-executive employees using ...
International audienceThis research provides an alternative framework for the analysis of employee s...
This research provides an alternative framework for the valuation of standard employee stock options...
This thesis focuses on the concept of loss aversion in cumulative prospect theory and applies cumula...
This study empirically investigates the value employees place on stock options using information fro...
I present a model where increasing employee participation in a stock option scheme leads to higher p...
Ce travail, composé de trois essais, se focalise sur la pertinence du cadre descriptif pour la repré...
Special Issue on Recent Developments in Decision-Making, Monetary Policy and Financial MarketsIntern...
This paper investigates a market-valuation-based hypothesis for employee stock options (ESOs). It ex...
Classic financial agency theory recommends compensation through stock options rather than shares to...