Hwei Cheng Wang | Yung-I Lou | Chiulien C. Venezia | Nicole A. Buzzetto-Hollywood
pages: 83-92;
JEL classification: M4, M12;
Keywords: CEO Compensation, Corporate Diversification, International Diversification, Industrial Diversification, Firm Performance, Investment Opportunity, Stock Ownership;
Abstract: The article is an attempt to assess whether Stock Ownership moderates the relationship between
corporate diversification and CEO compensation. Based on agency theory, we develop the
hypothesis of whether when CEOs hold a large fraction of their firms’ outstanding stock, the CEOs
are acting more as owners or shareholders than employees. This reduces the principal and agency
relationship of agency theory, since CEOs are acting as owners rather than employees; thus the
demand for further stock-based compensation is likely to be reduced because the interests of
CEOs and shareholders are relatively aligned. For the purposes of this study, a sample of 2,448
CEO compensations across 1,622 firms from 1997 to 2002 was used to test several hypotheses.
Corporate diversification was divided into two categories; international diversification and industry
diversification. To test the hypotheses, multiple regression analysis was employed to examine
stock ownership as a moderator variable on the relationship between international diversification
and industry diversification and CEO total compensation with tenure, age, duality, and gender as
control variables. The results indicate that stock ownership negatively and significantly influences
the relationship between International diversification and CEO compensation. Additionally, the
findings also confirm that stock ownership negatively and significantly influences the relationship
between industrial diversification and CEO compensation.