We study whether relative power in the chief executive officer (CEO)-chief financial officer (CFO) relationship influences CEO compensation. To operationalize relative power of a CEO over a CFO, we define CFO co-option as the appointment of a CFO after a CEO assumes office. We find that CFO co-option is associated with a CEO pay premium of about 10%, which is concentrated more in the early years of the co-opted CFO's tenure and in components of compensation that vary with the achievement of analyst based earnings targets. Our evidence also indicates that a primary channel through which CEO power over a co-opted CFO yields the achievement of earnings targets is the use of earnings management to inflate earnings. Co-opted CFOs rely primarily on using discretionary accruals to manage earnings prior to the Sarbanes-Oxley regulatory intervention and switch to real-activities manipulation afterward. The evidence thus suggests that the form of earnings management depends on costs imposed on the CFO to inflate earnings.
机构:
Univ Texas El Paso, Dept Econ & Finance, Coll Business Adm, El Paso, TX USAUniv Texas El Paso, Dept Econ & Finance, Coll Business Adm, El Paso, TX USA
Feng, Zifeng
Hardin, William G., III
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机构:
Florida Int Univ, Hollo Sch Real Estate Coll Business Adm, 1101 Brickell Ave,Suite 1101-S, Miami, FL 33131 USAUniv Texas El Paso, Dept Econ & Finance, Coll Business Adm, El Paso, TX USA
Hardin, William G., III
Wu, Zhonghua
论文数: 0引用数: 0
h-index: 0
机构:
Florida Int Univ, Hollo Sch Real Estate Coll Business Adm, 1101 Brickell Ave,Suite 1101-S, Miami, FL 33131 USAUniv Texas El Paso, Dept Econ & Finance, Coll Business Adm, El Paso, TX USA
Wu, Zhonghua
[J].
JOURNAL OF REAL ESTATE FINANCE AND ECONOMICS,
2022,