Affiliation:
1. The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania
2. London School of Economics
Abstract
ABSTRACTMany firms use relative stock performance to evaluate and incentivize their CEOs. We document that such firms routinely disclose information that harms their peers' stock prices, and sometimes explicitly mention the harmed peers, by name, in these disclosures. Consistent with deliberate sabotage, peer‐harming disclosures appear to be aimed at peers whose stock price depressions are most likely to benefit the disclosing firms' CEOs. The pricing effect of these disclosures does not reverse, suggesting that the disclosures contain legitimate information regarding peers' prospects. In sum, our results suggest that relative performance evaluation in CEO pay motivates CEOs to internalize the externalities of their disclosures, and strategically disclose information that harms peers' stock prices, in order to improve their firms' relative standing within their peer group.
Cited by
2 articles.
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1. Bridging Theory and Empirical Research in Accounting;Journal of Accounting Research;2024-04-26
2. Preemptive Disclosure;SSRN Electronic Journal;2024