Chief Financial Officer Co-option and Chief Executive Officer Compensation

被引:24
作者
Dikolli, Shane S. [1 ]
Heater, John C. [2 ]
Mayew, William J. [2 ]
Sethuraman, Mani [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Virginia, Darden Sch Business, Charlottesville, VA 22903 USA
[2] Duke Univ, Fuqua Sch Business, Durham, NC 27708 USA
[3] Cornell Univ, Samuel Curtis Johnson Grad Sch Management, Ithaca, NY 14853 USA
关键词
CFO; CEO; executive compensation; monitoring; financial reporting; managerial power; earnings management; discretionary accruals; real earnings management;
D O I
10.1287/mnsc.2019.3519
中图分类号
C93 [管理学];
学科分类号
12 ; 1201 ; 1202 ; 120202 ;
摘要
We study whether relative power in the chief executive officer (CEO)-chief financial officer (CFO) relationship influences CEO compensation. To operationalize relative power of a CEO over a CFO, we define CFO co-option as the appointment of a CFO after a CEO assumes office. We find that CFO co-option is associated with a CEO pay premium of about 10%, which is concentrated more in the early years of the co-opted CFO's tenure and in components of compensation that vary with the achievement of analyst based earnings targets. Our evidence also indicates that a primary channel through which CEO power over a co-opted CFO yields the achievement of earnings targets is the use of earnings management to inflate earnings. Co-opted CFOs rely primarily on using discretionary accruals to manage earnings prior to the Sarbanes-Oxley regulatory intervention and switch to real-activities manipulation afterward. The evidence thus suggests that the form of earnings management depends on costs imposed on the CFO to inflate earnings.
引用
收藏
页码:1939 / 1955
页数:18
相关论文
共 46 条
[1]   Discretionary accruals and earnings management: An analysis of pseudo earnings targets [J].
Ayers, BC ;
Jiang, J ;
Yeung, PE .
ACCOUNTING REVIEW, 2006, 81 (03) :617-652
[2]   The balance sheet as an earnings management constraint [J].
Barton, J ;
Simko, PJ .
ACCOUNTING REVIEW, 2002, 77 :1-27
[3]   The rewards to meeting or beating earnings expectations [J].
Bartov, E ;
Givoly, D ;
Hayn, C .
JOURNAL OF ACCOUNTING & ECONOMICS, 2002, 33 (02) :173-204
[4]  
Bebchuk L., 2004, Pay without Performance The Unfulfilled Promise of Executive Compensation
[5]   Chief Financial Officers as Inside Directors [J].
Bedard, Jean C. ;
Hoitash, Rani ;
Hoitash, Udi .
CONTEMPORARY ACCOUNTING RESEARCH, 2014, 31 (03) :787-817
[6]   CEO incentives and earnings management [J].
Bergstresser, Daniel ;
Philippon, Thomas .
JOURNAL OF FINANCIAL ECONOMICS, 2006, 80 (03) :511-529
[7]   Stock and Option Grants with Performance-based Vesting Provisions [J].
Bettis, Carr ;
Bizjak, John ;
Coles, Jeffrey ;
Kalpathy, Swaminathan .
REVIEW OF FINANCIAL STUDIES, 2010, 23 (10) :3849-3888
[8]  
Bishop CC, 2016, AUDITING, V36, P21
[9]   A temporal analysis of quarterly earnings thresholds: Propensities and valuation consequences [J].
Brown, LD ;
Caylor, ML .
ACCOUNTING REVIEW, 2005, 80 (02) :423-440
[10]   The incentives of compensation consultants and CEO pay [J].
Cadman, Brian ;
Carter, Mary Ellen ;
Hillegeist, Stephen .
JOURNAL OF ACCOUNTING & ECONOMICS, 2010, 49 (03) :263-280