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Do CEO risk-reducing incentives affect operating leverage? Evidence from CEO inside debt holdings

Gurmeet Singh Bhabra (Department of Accounting, Economics and Finance, Griffith University, Nathan, Australia)
Ashrafee Tanvir Hossain (Faculty of Business Administration, University of Newfoundland, Saint John's, Canada)

Meditari Accountancy Research

ISSN: 2049-372X

Article publication date: 19 September 2023

Issue publication date: 25 April 2024

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Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to investigate the relationship between CEOs' inside debt holdings (pension benefits and deferred compensation) and the operating leverage of the firms they manage, with the aim to examine whether CEO incentives play a role in corporate risk-taking.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors investigate the relation between CEO inside debt holdings (CIDH) (pension benefits and deferred compensation) and the operating leverage (DOL) of the firms they manage. Using a sample of 11,145 US firm-year observations over the period 2006–2017, the authors find a strong negative association between CIDH and DOL. Additional analyses reveal that the relationship between CIDH and DOL is more pronounced in firms with heightened agency issues, powerful CEOs and for CEOs with stronger professional networks. The results are robust to various sensitivity and endogeneity tests.

Findings

The authors find strong evidence confirming the expected negative association between CEO inside debt and DOL suggesting that firms with higher inside debt tend to maintain lower levels of operating leverage. These findings continue to hold with the alternative measure for the inside debt and operating leverage, and across a range of tests designed to rule out the possibility that the primary findings are in any way driven by potential endogeneity. In addition, the findings demonstrate that the presence of manager-shareholder agency conflicts can strengthen the inside debt–DOL relationship suggesting the strong role of inside debt in reducing firm risk.

Research limitations/implications

Findings in this paper have implications for design of compensation structures so that corporate boards can establish incentives as a tool for risk management. A limitation of this study is that it is focused on one market, i.e. US listed companies, so the findings may not be applicable on a global scale.

Originality/value

To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this is the first study that links firm-level management of operating leverage through design of CEO inside debt incentives (two obvious choices for risk-reduction at the CEOs’ disposal include reducing financial risk through reduction of firm leverage and reducing operating risk through reduction of operating leverage). While use of firm leverage as an instrument of choice has been explored in the past, use of operating leverage to achieve risk reduction when CEO possess high inside holding, has received very little attention.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors thank Harjeet Bhabra, Hasibul Chowdhury, Mostafa Hasan, Xiaobing Ma, and Jinghua Nie for their comments on the earlier version of the paper. The authors also acknowledge the significant contributions of two anonymous referees whose insightful comments and suggestions significantly helped in bringing the document to its final form. Hossain thanks Memorial University of Newfoundland and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC, Grant #430-2020-00275) for providing financial support.

Citation

Bhabra, G.S. and Hossain, A.T. (2024), "Do CEO risk-reducing incentives affect operating leverage? Evidence from CEO inside debt holdings", Meditari Accountancy Research, Vol. 32 No. 3, pp. 693-720. https://doi.org/10.1108/MEDAR-07-2022-1740

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © Emerald Publishing Limited

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