Standard corporate finance theories assume the absence of strategic product market interactions or that shareholders don’t diversify across industry rivals; the optimal incentive contract features pay-for-performance relative to industry peers. Empirical evidence, by contrast, indicates managers are rewarded for rivals’ performance as well as for their own. We propose common ownership of natural competitors by the same investors as an explanation. We show theoretically and empirically that executives are paid less for own performance and more for rivals’ performance when the industry is more commonly owned. The growth of common ownership also helps explain the increase in CEO pay over the past decades
This paper examines variations in executive pay as a function of CEO power. We assume that CEOs opti...
Would moving to relative performance contracts improve the alignment between CEO pay and performance...
I empirically examine the effect of product-market competition in an industry on incentives (defined...
Standard corporate finance theories assume the absence of strategic product market interactions or th...
Mutual funds, pension funds and other institutional investors are a growing presence in U.S. equity ...
We study oligopolistic competition in product markets where the firms’ quantity decisions are delega...
This Article addresses an important question in modern antitrust: when large investment funds have h...
This paper studies the effect of competition on executive compensation. We estimate the effect of i...
This paper studies the effect of product market competition on the explicit compensation packages th...
A large body of literature has developed on the disparities in compensation among chief executive of...
We empirically assess industry tournament incentives for CEOs, as measured by the compensation gap b...
The issue of pay equity within publicly-traded companies has been a question of growing interest in ...
We study how the CEO's power over the board of directors affects pay levels and the structure of opt...
We examine how ownership structure affects managerial incentive alignment mechanisms and strategic o...
This paper studies the effect of competition on executive compensation. We estimate the effect of in...
This paper examines variations in executive pay as a function of CEO power. We assume that CEOs opti...
Would moving to relative performance contracts improve the alignment between CEO pay and performance...
I empirically examine the effect of product-market competition in an industry on incentives (defined...
Standard corporate finance theories assume the absence of strategic product market interactions or th...
Mutual funds, pension funds and other institutional investors are a growing presence in U.S. equity ...
We study oligopolistic competition in product markets where the firms’ quantity decisions are delega...
This Article addresses an important question in modern antitrust: when large investment funds have h...
This paper studies the effect of competition on executive compensation. We estimate the effect of i...
This paper studies the effect of product market competition on the explicit compensation packages th...
A large body of literature has developed on the disparities in compensation among chief executive of...
We empirically assess industry tournament incentives for CEOs, as measured by the compensation gap b...
The issue of pay equity within publicly-traded companies has been a question of growing interest in ...
We study how the CEO's power over the board of directors affects pay levels and the structure of opt...
We examine how ownership structure affects managerial incentive alignment mechanisms and strategic o...
This paper studies the effect of competition on executive compensation. We estimate the effect of in...
This paper examines variations in executive pay as a function of CEO power. We assume that CEOs opti...
Would moving to relative performance contracts improve the alignment between CEO pay and performance...
I empirically examine the effect of product-market competition in an industry on incentives (defined...