2007
DOI: 10.1007/s11156-007-0034-y
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Changes in CEO compensation structure and the impact on firm performance following CEO turnover

Abstract: We document changes in compensation structure following CEO turnover and relate them to future performance. Compared to outgoing CEOs, incoming CEOs derive a significantly greater percentage of their compensation from option grants and new stock grants. The voluntary turnover sample shows similar changes in compensation structure while the forced turnover sample results suggest that new stock grants drive the significant increase in incentive compensation following turnover. Post-turnover performance is positi… Show more

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Cited by 37 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…Compensation on a new CEO was found to increase compared with the previous CEO left the company (Blackwell et al 2007;Elsaid and Davidson 2009). Blackwell found an increase in the level of compensation occurred at the sample of voluntarily turnover, and Elsaid and Davidson found an increase in the compensation amounted to 69%.…”
Section: The Relationship Between Compensation and Voluntary Ceo Turnmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Compensation on a new CEO was found to increase compared with the previous CEO left the company (Blackwell et al 2007;Elsaid and Davidson 2009). Blackwell found an increase in the level of compensation occurred at the sample of voluntarily turnover, and Elsaid and Davidson found an increase in the compensation amounted to 69%.…”
Section: The Relationship Between Compensation and Voluntary Ceo Turnmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Previous research suggests CEO pay for incumbent CEOs will be lower overall and favor performance-contingent forms of pay when the proportion of institutional investors is higher [19]. Similarly previous research suggests that new CEOs receive compensation packages favoring incentive pay instead of guaranteed forms of compensation [8], but whether the presence of institutional ownership affects the compensation structure has yet to be tested with the compensation of new CEOs.…”
Section: Creating Incentive Alignmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several studies show that compensation strategies favoring the CEO tend to be more common in firms lacking effective owneroversight. Similarly, compensation contracts which are structured to de-couple CEO pay from firm performance are associated with decreased financial performance [8,20]. Thus, new CEOs in firms with less oversight by institutional owners might have fewer decision constraints than CEOs in firms with effective institutional oversight, and financial performance could suffer.…”
Section: Performance and Ceo Successionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…ExecuComp"s executive compensation survey provided the circumstances of the CEO"s departure (e.g., retired, resigned, deceased) and this data was further cross-checked against credible news reports about the company. This study followed the same turnover assignment criteria by Blackwell and Dudney (2007), to identify forced and voluntary turnovers. From the initial group of 228 firms, the final group only considered firms with turnover events during the period under study, resulting in a final sample of 167 companies that experienced 222 turnovers during the 8 year period.…”
Section: Ceo Datamentioning
confidence: 99%