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CEO career horizon, corporate governance, and real options: The role of economic short-termism

Authors
Lee, Joon MahnPark, Jung ChulFolta, Timothy B.
Issue Date
10월-2018
Publisher
WILEY
Keywords
agency theory; CEO career horizon; economic short-termism; real options; strategic flexibility
Citation
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT JOURNAL, v.39, no.10, pp.2703 - 2725
Indexed
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT JOURNAL
Volume
39
Number
10
Start Page
2703
End Page
2725
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/73030
DOI
10.1002/smj.2929
ISSN
0143-2095
Abstract
Research Summary: Combining studies on real options theory and economic short-termism, we propose that, depending on CEOs' career horizons, CEOs have heterogeneous interests in strategic flexibility, and thus, have different incentives to make real options investments. We argue that compared to CEOs with longer career horizons, CEOs with shorter career horizons will be less inclined to make real options investments because they may not fully reap the rewards during their tenure. In addition, we argue that long-term incentives and institutional ownership will mitigate the relationship between CEOs' career horizons and real options investments. U.S. public firms as an empirical setting produced consistent evidence for our predictions. Our study is the first to theoretically explain and empirically show that a CEO's self-seeking behavior will impact real options investments. Managerial Summary: This article helps to explain how a CEO's self-seeking behavior may shape a firm's real option investment, which could result in different level of strategic flexibility. We argue that CEOs with short career horizons have less time to exercise their firms' real options, which should lower the investments in the firms' real options portfolios relative to CEOs with long career horizons. We study a sample of U.S. public firms and find strong evidence that a CEO's expected tenure in the firm is positively related to the real options investments at the firm level. We find that this agency issue can be mitigated by adopting appropriate corporate governance mechanisms such as long-term incentives and institutional investors.
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