Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
959520 | Journal of Financial Economics | 2012 | 16 Pages |
Abstract
While traditional finance theory holds that managers with option-laden incentive contracts may favor equity at the expense of debt, a risk-averse manager may be more likely to retain vested in-the-money options if the manager has private information that the firm's risk-adjusted performance will be better. It follows that vested option holdings should be positively associated with credit quality. In support of this, we find that vested option holdings have a strong negative association with loan pricing, especially for informationally sensitive loans, and also predict higher cash flows and credit ratings, a greater distance to default, and lower equity volatility.
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Authors
Cristian L. Dezső, David Gaddis Ross,