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FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
FROM: Nancy
Gardner (206) 543-2580
nancylou@u.washington.edu
DATE:
June 18, 2007
Following an acquisition of another company, chief executive
officers' compensation levels usually increase, even when
the purchase turns out to be unprofitable, according to researchers
at the University of Washington and University of British
Columbia. That's because while a bad merger can decrease
the value of a company's stock and options, CEOs typically
acquire new stock options once the deal goes through, thus
making up for any financial losses suffered as a result of
the buy.
"There are major personal financial gains to be made
by CEOs after any merger or acquisition so even if it ends
up being
a financial loss, shareholders suffer but CEOs nearly always
come out ahead financially," says Jarrad Harford, an
associate professor of finance and business economics at
the UW Business School and co-author of the study. "The
net effect is that a CEO's wealth actually increases even
if he makes a poor acquisition decision. The experience is
quite different for the shareholders."
However, he adds, companies whose boards of directors are
more independent from management and generally exercise stricter
corporate governance are more likely to penalize executives
for unprofitable merger deals.
For their study, the researchers examined 370 mergers of
publicly traded U.S. companies between 1993 and 2000. They
compared the wealth of the CEOs of the purchasing companies
a year before and a year after the acquisitions. Their wealth
was determined by calculating their salaries, stock and option
grants, and the value of their portfolio of existing stock
and options.
They divided the purchasing companies into two groups: those
whose stock increased after the merger, and those whose stock
suffered. The stock value of the underperforming companies
lagged the broader market by roughly 52 percent. Yet because
of new stock and option grants, three-quarters of the time
those CEOs became wealthier despite the downturn.
"While CEOs are still better off making good acquisition
decisions, there is little penalty to making bad ones, so
this sets
up a strong incentive to acquire, even when the chance of
failure is high. The sheer magnitude of new stock and options
grants given when the firm’s size increases more than
offset the effect of the acquisition on the CEO’s pre-merger
portfolio."
The authors note that one way to evaluate the independence
of a board is the proportion of board members who preceded
the CEO, and therefore were not nominated to the board by
the CEO.
"Investors who are concerned about evaluating a CEO's
potential payoffs from undertaking future acquisitions should
consider
examining the strength of the board," said Harford.
Kai Li, an associate professor of finance at the University
of British Columbia, co-authored the study, which appears
in the April issue of The Journal of Finance.
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