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Erschienen in: Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting 1/2010

01.07.2010 | Original Research

Heterogeneous institutional investors and CEO compensation

verfasst von: Yudan Zheng

Erschienen in: Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting | Ausgabe 1/2010

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Abstract

This paper examines the relationship between institutional ownership and executive compensation by taking into account the heterogeneity of institutional investors. The paper finds that ownership by transient institutional investors, who have short investment horizons and active trading, is positively related to the performance sensitivity of option grants for CEOs. However, no significant relationship holds for other types of institutions, including those dedicated institutional investors, who have longer horizon and concentrated holdings. Further tests suggest that the positive relationship between transient institutional ownership and the CEO pay-for-performance sensitivity is not driven by the trading behavior of transient institutional investors when stock performance is good. Instead, the paper documents preference of transient institutional investors for greater performance sensitivity of option grants for CEOs. After using an instrument approach to control for preference and endogeneity, transient institutional ownership is no longer significantly related to the CEO pay-for-performance sensitivity. Additionally, the paper does not find dedicated institutional investors serve a monitoring role in correcting overcompensation paid to CEOs. After controlling for preference and endogeneity, neither the level of salary nor the level of total direct compensation for CEOs is significantly related to dedicated institutional ownership. The findings suggest that on average the influence of institutional investors on CEO compensation occurs indirectly through their preference in line with their different investment types.

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Fußnoten
1
The author thanks Brian Bushee for providing the institutional classifications. See Bushee (1998, 2001) for further details on the classifications.
 
2
This perspective also distinguishes the current paper from a few working papers (Shin 2005; Dikolli et al. 2006), which also relate heterogeneous institutional investors with CEO compensation. For example, Shin (2005) focuses on the impact of heterogeneous institutional investors on the weight of forward-looking performance measure in determining CEO cash compensation as well as on the percentage of equity-based CEO compensation. Dikolli et al. (2006) study the impact of transient institutional ownership on the weight of current earnings in the design of compensation contract.
 
3
Smith and Swan (2007) argue that this measure depends on firm size and has an inbuilt bias toward small companies. In particular, the measure can be exceptionally large for those small firms which only have a few institutional investors.
 
4
According to Smith and Swan (2007), log of market capitalization is more appropriate than market capitalization itself to control for size effect in this model.
 
5
Regarding the incentive of quasi-indexers to monitor management, there are conflicting points of view. For example, Porter (1992) claims that passive, fragmented ownership by quasi-indexers leads them to gather little information on the company and provides little incentive to monitor managers. They just abdicate its potential influence over managers to other types of active investors. However, Monks and Minow (1995) argue that indexing strategies make quasi-indexers unable to sell and then have strong incentives to monitor management in order to ensure it is acting in the long-term interests of the firm. Because of these conflicting points of view, the author does not have a prior about the willingness of quasi-indexers to be engaged in monitoring activities.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
Heterogeneous institutional investors and CEO compensation
verfasst von
Yudan Zheng
Publikationsdatum
01.07.2010
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Review of Quantitative Finance and Accounting / Ausgabe 1/2010
Print ISSN: 0924-865X
Elektronische ISSN: 1573-7179
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11156-009-0142-y

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