Empirical evidence on the relation between stock option compensation and risk taking

S Rajgopal, T Shevlin - Journal of accounting and economics, 2002 - Elsevier
Journal of accounting and economics, 2002Elsevier
We examine whether executive stock options (ESOs) provide managers with incentives to
invest in risky projects. For a sample of oil and gas producers, we examine whether the
coefficient of variation of future cash flows from exploration activity (our proxy for exploration
risk) increases with the sensitivity of the value of the CEO's options to stock return volatility
(ESO risk incentives). Both ESO risk incentives and exploration risk are treated as
endogenous variables by adopting a simultaneous equations approach. We find evidence …
We examine whether executive stock options (ESOs) provide managers with incentives to invest in risky projects. For a sample of oil and gas producers, we examine whether the coefficient of variation of future cash flows from exploration activity (our proxy for exploration risk) increases with the sensitivity of the value of the CEO's options to stock return volatility (ESO risk incentives). Both ESO risk incentives and exploration risk are treated as endogenous variables by adopting a simultaneous equations approach. We find evidence that ESO risk incentives has a positive relation with future exploration risk taking. Additional tests indicate that ESO risk incentives exhibits a negative relation with oil price hedging in a system of equations where ESO risk incentives and hedging are allowed to be endogenously determined. Overall, our results are consistent with ESOs providing managers with incentives to mitigate risk-related incentive problems.
Elsevier
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果