7 research outputs found

    Post-CEO retirement appointments and financial accounting—Evidence from CEO turnovers

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    Prior research has shown that when boards seek to appoint CEOs as outside directors, the director labor market rewards CEOs’ accounting performance. This study examines whether the external labor market’s assessment of the accounting performance is moderated by CEOs’ past exercise of financial reporting discretion in the form of accruals and real earnings management and financial statement readability. Our results show a positive association between post-CEO board opportunities and within-GAAP accruals management as well as to more readable financial statements. Earnings restatements are associated with fewer board positions and director pay. However, the director labor market appears to punish R&D expenditure above the industry median, suggesting that boards view overinvestment as a risky avenue for growth. Finally, the results suggest that for CEOs with planned retirement, the director labor market provides some mitigating effect on the horizon problem.The Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC

    Managerial replacement strategies and severance pay

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    This paper demonstrates the benefits to shareholders of offering severance packages to managers. We show that severance pay is not merely a way to coax underperforming managers to step aside. Rather, a manager's efforts can pave the way for the manager's successor, and thereby attract more talented potential replacements. We consider two settings that differ on whether or not the shareholder can fully commit to a replacement strategy. In both settings the shareholder makes replacement decisions based on output and the availability of a suitable replacement candidate at the end of the first period. When the shareholder can fully commit to the circumstances of replacement, severance pay serves solely to improve contract efficiency, because the probability of the replacement candidate emerging is influenced by the incumbent manager's effort. In the setting without full commitment, severance pay not only improves contract efficiency but also allows the shareholder to expand the set of credible output–contingent replacement strategies. Generally, severance pay motivates managers to build value in the firm despite the possibility that in doing so, they make their own services obsolete
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