Contracting with controllable risk
We examine how executives' ability to control their firms' exposure to risk affects the design of their incentive-compensation contracts. Our natural experimental evidence shows that exchange-traded weather derivatives allow executives to control their firms' exposure to weather risk....
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sg-smu-ink.soa_research-30092023-01-11T15:15:26Z Contracting with controllable risk ARMSTRONG, Christopher S. GLAESER, Stephen A. HUANG, Sterling We examine how executives' ability to control their firms' exposure to risk affects the design of their incentive-compensation contracts. Our natural experimental evidence shows that exchange-traded weather derivatives allow executives to control their firms' exposure to weather risk. Once these derivatives became available, those executives who use them to hedge experience relative reductions in their total compensation and equity incentives. The decline in compensation is consistent with a reduction in the risk premium that executives receive for exposure to weather risk. The decline in equity incentives is consistent with the relation between risk and incentives shifting in a complementary direction when executives can better control their firms' exposure to risk. Collectively, our findings provide evidence that executives' ability to control their firms' exposure and, by extension, their own to an important source of risk influences the design of their incentive-compensation contracts. 2022-07-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soa_research/1982 info:doi/10.2308/TAR-2018-0265 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soa_research/article/3009/viewcontent/ContractingControllableRisk_2021_sv.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection School Of Accountancy eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University executive compensation contract design equity incentives risk-taking incentives stock options derivatives hedging natural experiment Accounting Corporate Finance |
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executive compensation contract design equity incentives risk-taking incentives stock options derivatives hedging natural experiment Accounting Corporate Finance ARMSTRONG, Christopher S. GLAESER, Stephen A. HUANG, Sterling Contracting with controllable risk |
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We examine how executives' ability to control their firms' exposure to risk affects the design of their incentive-compensation contracts. Our natural experimental evidence shows that exchange-traded weather derivatives allow executives to control their firms' exposure to weather risk. Once these derivatives became available, those executives who use them to hedge experience relative reductions in their total compensation and equity incentives. The decline in compensation is consistent with a reduction in the risk premium that executives receive for exposure to weather risk. The decline in equity incentives is consistent with the relation between risk and incentives shifting in a complementary direction when executives can better control their firms' exposure to risk. Collectively, our findings provide evidence that executives' ability to control their firms' exposure and, by extension, their own to an important source of risk influences the design of their incentive-compensation contracts. |
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text |
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ARMSTRONG, Christopher S. GLAESER, Stephen A. HUANG, Sterling |
author_facet |
ARMSTRONG, Christopher S. GLAESER, Stephen A. HUANG, Sterling |
author_sort |
ARMSTRONG, Christopher S. |
title |
Contracting with controllable risk |
title_short |
Contracting with controllable risk |
title_full |
Contracting with controllable risk |
title_fullStr |
Contracting with controllable risk |
title_full_unstemmed |
Contracting with controllable risk |
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contracting with controllable risk |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2022 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soa_research/1982 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soa_research/article/3009/viewcontent/ContractingControllableRisk_2021_sv.pdf |
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