Authors
Shane A Johnson, Harley E Ryan Jr, Yisong S Tian
Publication date
2009/1/1
Journal
Review of Finance
Volume
13
Issue
1
Pages
115-145
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Operating performance and stock return results imply that managers who commit fraud anticipate large stock price declines if they were to report truthfully, which would cause greater losses for managerial stockholdings than for options because of differences in convexity. Fraud firms have significantly greater incentives from unrestricted stockholdings than control firms do, and unrestricted stockholdings are their largest incentive source. Our results emphasize the importance of the shape and vesting status of incentive payoffs in providing incentives to commit fraud. Fraud firms also have characteristics that suggest a lower likelihood of fraud detection, which implies lower expected costs of fraud.
Total citations
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