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Downsizing decisions: The joint influence of equity incentives and behavioral biases
Authors:Thomas J Lopez  Troy Pollard  Austin Reitenga  Shane Stinson
Institution:Culverhouse School of Accountancy, Culverhouse College of Business, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Alabama, USA
Abstract:Although new investment can be viewed as a decision to pursue projects from a wide number of growth opportunities with easily discernible (and presumably preferable) risk profiles, downsizing (e.g., through layoffs, plant closings, asset divestitures, etc.) is a dichotomous choice to either abandon or continue an existing project where the relative risk between these options is not clear. Our evidence suggests that vega in the pre-downsizing period is associated with risky investment that necessitates future downsizing. We further find that contemporaneous vega is associated with a greater likelihood of downsizing. On the other hand, our evidence suggests that delta is a significant impediment to downsizing. We examine the influence of behavioral factors in the decision-making process and find downsizing decisions are discouraged by managerial overconfidence but encouraged by managers’ aversion to ambiguity. Finally, we investigate whether equity incentives and behavioral factors lead to better downsizing decisions. We find that downsizing firms with high ambiguity perform better after downsizing relative to their matched pair with lower ambiguity.
Keywords:ambiguity  downsizing  equity incentives  executive compensation  overconfidence  restructuring  stock options
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