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Active Institutional Shareholders and Costs of Monitoring: Evidence from Executive Compensation
Authors:Andres Almazan  Jay C. Hartzell  Laura T. Starks
Affiliation:Associate Professor of Finance at the University of Texas in Austin, TX;Assistant Professor of Finance at the University of Texas in Austin, TX;Seay Regents' Chair and Professor of Finance at the University of Texas in Austin, TX
Abstract:Although evidence suggests that institutional investors play a role in monitoring management, not all institutions are equally willing or able to serve this function. We present a stylized model that examines the effects of institutional monitoring on executive compensation. The model predicts that institutions' influence on managers' pay-for-performance sensitivity and level of compensation is enhanced when institutions have lower implied costs of monitoring, but that these effects are attenuated when the firm-specific cost of monitoring is high. Our empirical results are broadly consistent with these implications, suggesting that independent investment advisors and investment company managers have advantages in monitoring firms' management.
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