Publication | Closed Access
CEO's Inside Debt and Dynamics of Capital Structure
52
Citations
37
References
2016
Year
Corporate Risk ManagementFinancial ManagementFinancial Risk ManagementFinancial StructureDebt‐type CompensationManagementBusinessInside DebtCorporate GovernanceInside Debt RatioFinancingFinanceCapital StructureCorporate FinanceFinancial Risk
Debt‐type compensation (inside debt) exacerbates the divergence in risk preferences between the chief executive officer (CEO) and shareholders and, in turn, affects capital structure decisions. An excessively risk‐averse CEO tends to use less debt than the shareholders desire, reduce debt quickly when the firm is overlevered, but is reluctant to increase debt when the firm is underlevered. We find that higher CEO's inside debt ratio (i.e., inside debt as a percentage of total incentive compensation) is associated with lower firm leverage and faster (slower) leverage adjustments toward the shareholders’ desired level for overlevered (underlevered) firms. The CEO's inside debt ratio most conducive to capital structure rebalancing is around 10% of the firm's market debt ratio.
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