Publication | Closed Access
Does the Location of Directors Matter? Information Acquisition and Board Decisions
145
Citations
57
References
2014
Year
Mergers And AcquisitionsOwnership StructureFirm PerformanceFinancial ManagementCorporate HeadquartersDirectors MatterBoard DistanceGeographic DistanceManagementBusinessOrganizational EconomicsBusiness StrategyInformation AcquisitionCorporate GovernanceStrategic ManagementInformation ManagementBoard DecisionsCorporate Finance
Abstract Using data on over 4,000 individual residential addresses, we find that geographic distance between directors and corporate headquarters is related to information acquisition and board decisions. The fraction of a board’s unaffiliated directors who live near headquarters is higher when information-gathering needs are greater. When the fraction of unaffiliated directors living near headquarters is lower, nonroutine chief executive officer (CEO) turnover is more sensitive to stock performance. Also, the level, intensity, and sensitivity of CEO equity-based pay increase with board distance. Overall, our results suggest that geographic location is an important dimension of board structure that influences directors’ costs of gathering information.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1