Inside Debt and the Design of Corporate Debt Contracts

Theory posits that managerial holdings of debt ("inside debt") align managers' incentives with those of outside debtholders. Executive pensions, consisting of rank-and-file (RAF) plans and supplemental executive retirement plans (SERPs), and other deferred compensation (ODC) have debt...

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Veröffentlicht in:Management science 2014-05, Vol.60 (5), p.1260-1280
Hauptverfasser: Anantharaman, Divya, Fang, Vivian W., Gong, Guojin
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container_title Management science
container_volume 60
creator Anantharaman, Divya
Fang, Vivian W.
Gong, Guojin
description Theory posits that managerial holdings of debt ("inside debt") align managers' incentives with those of outside debtholders. Executive pensions, consisting of rank-and-file (RAF) plans and supplemental executive retirement plans (SERPs), and other deferred compensation (ODC) have debt-like payoffs, and could therefore function as inside debt. However, whereas SERPs are often unfunded and unsecured, RAF plans are funded and secured to some extent, and ODC may be invested in equity and withdrawn flexibly before retirement. Special arrangements in executive debt-like compensation could hence weaken or even nullify any incentive-alignment effect. We find that higher CEO debt-like compensation leads to lower promised yield and fewer covenants in a sample of loans originated in 2006-2008. This effect is driven entirely by benefits accrued under SERPs, consistent with SERPs more closely resembling risky corporate debt; balances accrued under RAF and ODC plans do not provide similar effects. Furthermore, promised yields are lower when debt-like compensation claims can be withdrawn only after outside debt claims are expected to settle. Our findings persist after accounting for endogeneity using state personal income tax rates as an instrument for CEOs' willingness to defer compensation. Overall, the evidence suggests that executive debt-like compensation is only effective at resolving stockholder-debtholder conflicts when its payoffs are truly debt-like and that lenders' perceptions are affected not only by the magnitude of debt-like compensation but also by its seniority. Data, as supplemental material, are available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2013.1813 . This paper was accepted by Wei Jiang, finance .
doi_str_mv 10.1287/mnsc.2013.1813
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Executive pensions, consisting of rank-and-file (RAF) plans and supplemental executive retirement plans (SERPs), and other deferred compensation (ODC) have debt-like payoffs, and could therefore function as inside debt. However, whereas SERPs are often unfunded and unsecured, RAF plans are funded and secured to some extent, and ODC may be invested in equity and withdrawn flexibly before retirement. Special arrangements in executive debt-like compensation could hence weaken or even nullify any incentive-alignment effect. We find that higher CEO debt-like compensation leads to lower promised yield and fewer covenants in a sample of loans originated in 2006-2008. This effect is driven entirely by benefits accrued under SERPs, consistent with SERPs more closely resembling risky corporate debt; balances accrued under RAF and ODC plans do not provide similar effects. Furthermore, promised yields are lower when debt-like compensation claims can be withdrawn only after outside debt claims are expected to settle. Our findings persist after accounting for endogeneity using state personal income tax rates as an instrument for CEOs' willingness to defer compensation. Overall, the evidence suggests that executive debt-like compensation is only effective at resolving stockholder-debtholder conflicts when its payoffs are truly debt-like and that lenders' perceptions are affected not only by the magnitude of debt-like compensation but also by its seniority. Data, as supplemental material, are available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2013.1813 . 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Furthermore, promised yields are lower when debt-like compensation claims can be withdrawn only after outside debt claims are expected to settle. Our findings persist after accounting for endogeneity using state personal income tax rates as an instrument for CEOs' willingness to defer compensation. Overall, the evidence suggests that executive debt-like compensation is only effective at resolving stockholder-debtholder conflicts when its payoffs are truly debt-like and that lenders' perceptions are affected not only by the magnitude of debt-like compensation but also by its seniority. Data, as supplemental material, are available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2013.1813 . 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source INFORMS PubsOnLine; Business Source Complete; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Business entities
Chief executive officers
Compensation
Compensation and benefits
Consulting services
Contracts
Corporate debt
Covenants
debt contracting
Debt contracts
Debt financing (Corporations)
debt-like compensation
Deferred compensation
Equity
Executive compensation
Executives
Financial leverage
Incentives
Income tax
Income taxes
inside debt
Insolvency
Loans
Pay-off
Pension plans
Pensions
Personal income
Personal income tax
Retirement
Retirement income
Retirement plans
State income tax
Stockholders
Studies
Tax law
Tax rates
title Inside Debt and the Design of Corporate Debt Contracts
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