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AGENCY CONFLICTS AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE Behavioral Corporate Finance by Hersh Shefrin
McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Learning Objectives
1.Explain how overconfidence prevents corporate boards from putting compensation systems in place that align the interests of managers and shareholders 2.Explain the role of prospect theory casino effects in aligning the interests of shareholders and managers
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3.Describe how aversion to a sure loss can interfere with the alignment of the interests of investors and the interests of auditors engaged to monitor managers 4.Analyze how, because of aversion to a sure loss and overconfidence, stock option-based compensation can exacerbate agency conflicts
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Traditional Approach
Agency theory is used to study the structure of compensation contracts that principals offer to agents engaged to act on their behalf. In the corporate governance setting, shareholders are the principals, the board of directors is charged with representing the interests of shareholders, and the firms managers are the agents.
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Plot
Bialystock raises a large amount of money from investors by selling more than 100% of a new show25,000% actually. He enlists a meek accountant named Leo Bloom to produce a flop that will enable him to hide his actions. In Bialystocks plan, the show fails, enabling him to apologize to investors for having lost their money, which he then proceeds to keep.
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The Point
The plot of The Producers has 3 key features. 1. Principal-agent relationship involved, where principals (the investors) entrust their money to an agent (the producer). 2. Inherent conflict of interest between the principals and the agent. 3. Third, the agent is better informed than the principals.
Traditional Approach
Rational principals offer contracts to rational agents that combine positive rewards and penalties, so called carrots and sticks, with three goals in mind. 1. Participation: offer the agent a contract that is attractive enough. 2. Incentive compatibility: Set the carrot-stick differential to induce the agent to represent the interests of the principal. 3. Don't overpay the agent.
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Managers who bear such risk might react by behaving in too risk averse a fashion, to the detriment of investors.
Options reward managers for favorable outcomes, but do not penalize them for unfavorable outcomes.
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Executive pay has featured too narrow a carrot-stick differential, resulting in low variability in respect to corporate performance. The frequency with which CEOs are dismissed for poor results is low. Corporate stock options do not appear to play a major role in aligning the interests of executives and investors. Some evidence points to the relative strength of shareholder rights as being key.
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Low Variability
For the median CEO in the 250 largest companies, a $1,000 change in corporate value corresponded to a change of just 6.7 cents in salary and bonus over two years. A $1,000 change in corporate value corresponded to a change in CEO compensation of just $2.59.
Accounting for all monetary sources of CEO incentivessalary and bonus, stock options, shares owned, and the changing likelihood of dismissal
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Stock Options
There is some evidence that firms offering stock options to their employees perform better. Options lead to increased firm value, principally because they aid in employee retention, and serve as a substitute for cash compensation in cash-strapped firms. Less clear is whether stock options serve to align the incentives of executives and employees with those of shareholders.
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Controversy
Warren Buffet has been a longtime critic of the manner in which firms use stock options. He suggests that although options can be appropriate in theory, in practice their use has been capricious, inefficient as motivators, and very expensive for shareholders. The manner in which options are recorded in financial statements has been a long running subject of debate, whether as footnotes or expensed.
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Shareholder Rights
Provisions that move away from one share one vote and put anti-takeover provisions in place contribute to weak shareholder rights. The evidence indicates that firms with stronger shareholder rights are associated with
higher firm value higher profits higher sales growth lower capital expenditures, and fewer corporate acquisitions
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Its really amateurs vs. pros. Im classing the directors, in most cases, as amateurs, and management, together with the compensation consultants they hire, as pros. You can have a very sophisticated board--and itll still be amateurs vs. pros
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You agreed to work here for a year under that deal, and if the shareholders get dung, then you get dung. CEOs will claim its all deserved, saying, Look at the way I made my stock go up. Thats bunk in a lot of cases, egregiously so at companies that dont pay dividends.
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Let me refer you to a Treasury zero bond: If you buy one today and hold on for ten years, it will rise by 74%. And you wont even have had to give President Bush an option on the bond.
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Stock Options
There are two important behavioral phenomena associated with stock options being used to compensate employees, especially executives. 1. Excessively optimistic, overconfident employees overvalue the stock options they are granted. 2. Casino effect.
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Casino Effect
They say, You can fiddle with my bonus, but dont cut out my options--because they know theres the big casino waiting out there.
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Next, imagine that you are registering to participate in a lottery, where the probability of winning is 0.002 (actually 2/900). If you win the lottery, your prize is a choice to play yet another lottery, where you will face either alternative A or alternative B above. You need to commit, in advance, whether you would prefer to play alternative A or alternative B, should you win the opportunity to do so.
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D:
Reframing
Concept preview question 8.2 is a reframing of the second part of the concept preview question 8.1. To see why, just multiply the probability of winning the lottery (2/900) by the probability of winning $2,000 in A (0.9), to obtain 0.002 = 2/900 x 0.9.
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The Point
The point is that when people focus directly on the low probabilities, they act as if they overweight lower probabilities relative to higher probabilities. In choosing alternative D over alternative C, they act as if they are risk seeking rather than risk averse. However, in concept preview question 8.1, where they focus on probabilities that are much higher, they act as if they are risk averse. 30
Traditional Perspective
Auditors are vulnerable to being bribed by unscrupulous firms in order to issue clean opinions. Notably, auditing firms are partnerships, not corporations. The traditional view holds that auditing firms have reputations to protect, reputations for integrity.
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Signaling
A firm that seeks to communicate that its financial statements are clean might engage the services of an auditor with a high reputation who also charges high fees. Signaling theory stipulates that firms who face accounting problems would not use such an auditor. Therefore the choice of auditor in and of itself sends a strong signal to investors.
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What Happened?
Consulting division had become much more profitable than the auditing division. In 1989, the consultants managed to alter the profit-sharing rule, in their favor. The change in sharing rule left the auditors lagging behind those of attorneys, investment bankers, and especially consultants.
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2X
In 1997, the partners at Andersen Consulting voted to split off completely from Arthur Andersen to become Accenture. In the wake of their departure Arthur Andersen instituted a policy known as 2X. Under 2X, for every dollar of auditing work, partners were required to bring in twice the revenue in non-auditing work.
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Scandals
One of Andersens initiatives was to encourage clients to engage Andersen for both internal and external auditing services. Among the list of Arthur Andersens audit clients were: Boston Chicken, Sunbeam, Waste Management Inc., WorldCom, and Enron. At each of these firms, a major scandal ensued.
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Conflicts of Interest
Arthur Andersen decided to take on the roles of both internal and external auditor. Arthur Levitt chaired the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) raised concerns that practices of this sort would jeopardize the quality of audits.
Sarbanes-Oxley
Since 2000, a succession of corporate scandals with varying degrees of fraud made clear that compensation in the form of stock and stock options could not be counted upon to align the interests of investors and managers. Among the firms involved in fraudulent activities were Coca-Cola, IBM, Sunbeam, Cendant, Xerox, Lernout & Hauspie, Parmalat, Enron, WorldCom and Healthsouth.
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Certification
In the wake of these financial scandals, Congress passed the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. SEC requires that the CEO and CFO of every publicly traded firm certify, under oath, the veracity of their firms financial statements.
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Independent directors neither work for nor do business with a corporation or its executives.
Board audit committees are required to include at least one financial expert. Every quarter, after the CEO and CFO have certified the firms financial statements, the full panel must review those statements.
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Amplification
Moreover, excessively optimistic, overconfident managers who are unethical will be prone to underestimate the chances that fraudulent behavior on their parts will be discovered. Indeed, stock and stock option compensation can actually amplify agency conflicts when managers find they can manipulate the market value of their firms.
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HealthSouth
HealthSouth was founded in 1984. At year-end 2001, HealthSouth was the largest U.S. provider of outpatient surgery, diagnostic imaging and rehabilitation services. In 2002 HealthSouth was investigated for an accounting fraud that prosecutors suspect began as early as 1986.
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Between 1999 and the second quarter of 2002, HealthSouth overstated its income by $1.4 billion. The SEC accused HealthSouth executives of having engaged in insider trading by selling substantial amounts of HealthSouth stock while they knew that the firms financial statements grossly misstated its earnings and assets. As part of their compensation, HealthSouths executives received options on 3.6 million shares of HealthSouth stock.
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Richard Scrushy
HealthSouths founder and CEO was Richard Scrushy. Specifically, the SEC alleged that Scrushy induced HealthSouth executives to manipulate the firms stock price until he could sell off large blocks of stock worth $25 million. The SEC claimed that since 1991 Scrushy sold at least 13.8 million shares for proceeds in excess of $170 million.
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20.0% 18.0% 16.0% 14.0% 12.0% 10.0% 8.0% 6.0% 4.0% 2.0% 0.0% 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 Date 1996 1998 2000
Se pSe 6 pSe 7 pSe pSe 9 pSe 9 0 pSe 9 1 pSe 9 2 pSe 9 3 pSe 9 pSe 9 5 pSe 9 6 pSe 9 7 pSe 9 pSe 9 9 pSe 0 0 pSe 0 1 p02
ate
Exhibit 8-1
HealthSouth
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Signs of Disease?
HealthSouth Free Cash Flow 1986 -2001
$1,000.00 $500.00 $ Millions $0.00 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 ($500.00) ($1,000.00) ($1,500.00) ate 2000
Exhibit 8-2
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Borrowing
Much of HealthSouths negative free cash flow in exhibit 8-2 stems from continued borrowing. High leverage does not necessarily force fraudulent firms to fail in short order. Only on April 1, 2003 did the firm announce that it would default on a $350 million bond payment and was dismissing its CEO Richard Scrushy.
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Summary
In practice, executive compensation displays too little variability in respect to pay for performance, insufficient dismissal, and excessive payment for executives. Directors have been overconfident in their ability to structure incentives appropriately without overpaying executives. Directors' tasks are made more difficult by overconfidence on the part of executives.
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In traditional theory, employee stock options are used to align the risk attitudes of managers and shareholders. Managers who behave in accordance with prospect theory might find the risk characteristics of stock options attractive because of its casino effect. Stock options might also induce risk seeking behavior because of the tendency to overweight low probabilities.
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The combination of aversion to a sure loss and overconfidence can also induce ambitious, unethical managers to manipulate accounting information in order to exercise their stock options when the stock was overpriced. In this respect, a combination of behavioral phenomena and agency conflicts affected some accounting firms. Those events were the catalyst for the passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.
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