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ARE FOUNDER CEOS MORE OVERCONFIDENT THAN PROFESSIONAL CEOS? EVIDENCE FROM S&P 1500 COMPANIES

Authors
Lee, Joon MahnHwang, Byoung-HyounChen, Hailiang
Issue Date
3월-2017
Publisher
WILEY
Keywords
overconfidence; founder CEOs; professional CEOs; corporate governance
Citation
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT JOURNAL, v.38, no.3, pp.751 - 769
Indexed
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT JOURNAL
Volume
38
Number
3
Start Page
751
End Page
769
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/84285
DOI
10.1002/smj.2519
ISSN
0143-2095
Abstract
Research summary: We provide evidence that founder chief executive officers (CEOs) of large S&P 1500 companies are more overconfident than their nonfounder counterparts ("professional CEOs"). We measure overconfidence via tone of CEO tweets, tone of CEO statements during earnings conference calls, management earnings forecasts, and CEO option-exercise behavior. Compared with professional CEOs, founder CEOs use more optimistic language on Twitter and during earnings conference calls. In addition, founder CEOs are more likely to issue earnings forecasts that are too high; they are also more likely to perceive their firms to be undervalued, as implied by their option-exercise behavior. We provide evidence that, to date, investors appear unaware of this "overconfidence bias" among founders. Managerial summary: This article helps to explain why firms managed by founder chief executive officers (CEOs) behave differently from those managed by professional CEOs. We study a sample of S&P 1500 firms and find strong evidence that founder CEOs are more overconfident than professional CEOs. To date, investors appear unaware of this overconfidence bias among founders. Our study should help firm stakeholders, including investors, employees, suppliers, and customers, put the statements and actions of founder CEOs in perspective. Our study should also help members of corporate boards make more informed decisions about whether to retain (or bring back) founder CEOs or hire professional CEOs. Copyright (C) 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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