We examine the financial performance of UK listed companies surrounding the announcement of permanent employee layoffs. We find that poor operating and stock price performance, increased gearing, and threats from external markets for corporate control precede employee layoffs. Layoff announcements elicit a significantly negative stock price reaction, which is driven by announcements that are reactive to poor financial conditions. We also find that layoffs result in significant increases in employee productivity and corporate focus. We conclude that layoffs represent an efficient response to poor financial conditions, but that their occurrence is strongly dependent on pressure from external control markets
This paper examines the connection between layoffs, executive pay, and stock prices. Firms that anno...
Global economic events, such as recent years’ global financial crisis, the transfer of production to...
In response to increasing competitive pressures, managers are more than ever before looking at how t...
We examine the financial performance of UK listed companies surrounding the announcement of permanen...
We examine the financial performance of UK listed companies surrounding the announcement of permanen...
Employee layoff decisions made during adverse economic conditions are expected to signal poor invest...
Employee layoff decisions made during adverse economic conditions are expected to signal poor invest...
Employee layoff decisions made during adverse economic conditions are expected to signal poor invest...
Two hypotheses are considered to explain employee layoffs by corporations: (1) the declining investm...
Prior empirical studies indicate that investors perceptions of managerial decisions are contingent o...
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the impact of corporate layoff announcements on stock re...
Prior research has presented two conflicting hypotheses regarding the effect of a firm's financial c...
The objective of this paper is to find out if the country level differences in legal protection of i...
This paper examines share price behaviour surrounding announcements of CEO departures from UK firms ...
We investigate whether investor anticipation of future performance differs between union and nonunio...
This paper examines the connection between layoffs, executive pay, and stock prices. Firms that anno...
Global economic events, such as recent years’ global financial crisis, the transfer of production to...
In response to increasing competitive pressures, managers are more than ever before looking at how t...
We examine the financial performance of UK listed companies surrounding the announcement of permanen...
We examine the financial performance of UK listed companies surrounding the announcement of permanen...
Employee layoff decisions made during adverse economic conditions are expected to signal poor invest...
Employee layoff decisions made during adverse economic conditions are expected to signal poor invest...
Employee layoff decisions made during adverse economic conditions are expected to signal poor invest...
Two hypotheses are considered to explain employee layoffs by corporations: (1) the declining investm...
Prior empirical studies indicate that investors perceptions of managerial decisions are contingent o...
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the impact of corporate layoff announcements on stock re...
Prior research has presented two conflicting hypotheses regarding the effect of a firm's financial c...
The objective of this paper is to find out if the country level differences in legal protection of i...
This paper examines share price behaviour surrounding announcements of CEO departures from UK firms ...
We investigate whether investor anticipation of future performance differs between union and nonunio...
This paper examines the connection between layoffs, executive pay, and stock prices. Firms that anno...
Global economic events, such as recent years’ global financial crisis, the transfer of production to...
In response to increasing competitive pressures, managers are more than ever before looking at how t...