In the literature two major hypotheses have been developed for Employee Stock Ownership Plans used as a takeover defense, the management entrenchment and shareholder interest hypotheses, with the existing research not finding conclusive evidence for either one. In this paper we provide evidence that the entrenchment hypothesis is not supported by finding that Employee Stock Ownership Plan firms pay less to their managers than non-Employee Stock Ownership Plan firms. If managers were truly entrenched they would have been able to expropriate wealth from the existing shareholders, which appears not to be the case for Employee Stock Ownership Plan firms
Investors and academics increasingly criticize that features of employee stock option (ESO) programs...
International audienceEmployee ownership is often used not only as a reward management tool but also...
This paper investigates a market-valuation-based hypothesis for employee stock options (ESOs). It ex...
In the literature two major hypotheses have been developed for Employee Stock Ownership Plans used a...
Hostile takeover. Leveraged buyout. Almost every company chief executive hates to hear those two ter...
This study seeks to ascertain the impact of employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs) on earnings manag...
In 1974, Congress enacted the Employee Retirement and Income Security Act (ERISA), which was designe...
During the first six months of 1989 U.s. corporations acquired over $19 billion of their own stock t...
Does managerial entrenchment create or destroy shareholder value? This Article presents both theory ...
Agency theorists have long contended that managerial entrenchment is detrimental for shareholders, b...
This paper examines the roots of the abuse of stock options, finding it centered on a principal/agen...
An important, but little reported development in US business has been increasing numbers of employee...
How employee share ownership plans (ESOPs) affect employee compensation and shareholder value depend...
This research aimed to investigate the influence earnings management to the compensationof the Emplo...
Investors and academics increasingly criticize that features of employee stock option (ESO) programs...
International audienceEmployee ownership is often used not only as a reward management tool but also...
This paper investigates a market-valuation-based hypothesis for employee stock options (ESOs). It ex...
In the literature two major hypotheses have been developed for Employee Stock Ownership Plans used a...
Hostile takeover. Leveraged buyout. Almost every company chief executive hates to hear those two ter...
This study seeks to ascertain the impact of employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs) on earnings manag...
In 1974, Congress enacted the Employee Retirement and Income Security Act (ERISA), which was designe...
During the first six months of 1989 U.s. corporations acquired over $19 billion of their own stock t...
Does managerial entrenchment create or destroy shareholder value? This Article presents both theory ...
Agency theorists have long contended that managerial entrenchment is detrimental for shareholders, b...
This paper examines the roots of the abuse of stock options, finding it centered on a principal/agen...
An important, but little reported development in US business has been increasing numbers of employee...
How employee share ownership plans (ESOPs) affect employee compensation and shareholder value depend...
This research aimed to investigate the influence earnings management to the compensationof the Emplo...
Investors and academics increasingly criticize that features of employee stock option (ESO) programs...
International audienceEmployee ownership is often used not only as a reward management tool but also...
This paper investigates a market-valuation-based hypothesis for employee stock options (ESOs). It ex...