Three Essays on Dividend and Payout Policy


Book Description

This dissertation contains 3 essays on dividend/payout policy. In the first essay, using a sample of 76,129 firm-years from 32 countries, I show that both the probability and amount of dividend payments are significantly lower in countries with poor creditor rights. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that poor creditor protection exacerbates the agency costs of debt. Poorly-protected creditors have a strong incentive to protect their investment by restricting dividend payments through formal debt covenants and multiperiod contracting. Firm managers also have an incentive to restrict dividends in order to build reputation capital, thereby reducing moral hazard problems and financing costs. The second essay examines the impact of managerial myopia on dividend catering and is based on US firms. I find strong evidence that the sensitivity of dividend changes to dividend premiums increase with managerial myopia. These findings are robust to firm-characteristics, idiosyncratic risk, taxes, time trends and potential sample selection biases. The last essay documents that increasing use of repurchases largely explains the disappearing dividends puzzle documented by Fama and French (2001). I find no evidence of consistent declining propensity to pay out cash for US firms after controlling for changing firm characteristics. By extending the Fama and French (2001) methodology, I examine the behavior of abnormal payout amount. Results show that most firms pay out 92.8% of the predicted payout amount. These findings are consistent with dividend-repurchase substitution documented by Grullon and Michaely (2002).
















Three Essays on Say-on-Pay


Book Description

This dissertation comprises three essays on issues related to Say-on-Pay, a governance measure which allows shareholders to vote on executive compensation. In the first essay adopting a window-dressing perspective, I examine whether the mandatory adoption of Say-on-Pay is associated with opportunistic non-GAAP reporting to mislead shareholders about firm's performance and avoid shareholder dissatisfaction against executive compensation. The sample comprises U.S. Fortune 250 firms, from 2003 until 2017. Results show that managers increasingly disclose non-GAAP earnings and exclude recurring items after the mandatory adoption of Say-on-Pay regulation. Also, managers' exclusion choice of recurring items and the likelihood of reporting non-GAAP metrics are more pronounced during years when the firm is subject to a vote. The findings shed some light on the unintended consequences of Say-on-Pay, especially when the ethical concerns about non-GAAP reporting are raised. The second essay integrates agency and resource dependence theories to examine the influence of compensation committee members' qualities and non-GAAP reporting on shareholders' Say-on-Pay support. Compensation committee quality is an aggregate measure of compensation committee attributes that include the directors' interdependencies, their tenure, holding a CEO position, the number of seats they hold, and committee size. Results suggest that high quality compensation committees influence shareholders to provide a support to their Say-on-Pay vote. Moreover, the quality of non-GAAP reporting is associated with shareholders' votes. Shareholders do not appear to be misled by low-quality non-GAAP metrics and managers' opportunistic motive. On the contrary, shareholders vote against executive compensation when these metrics are of low-quality. While policy makers have set the regulation to curb excessive executive pay through shareholders' votes, this study reveals that factors other than the excess pay itself may influence shareholders' perceptions. The third essay synthesizes research on Say-on-Pay and classifies it into two categories that revolve around the determinants and consequences of Say-on-Pay. Based on the first and second essays of my dissertation, I build a conceptual model that represents two closed interconnections. The first connection is between Say-on-Pay and compensation committees. Shareholders' Say-on-Pay votes are more favorable when compensation committee quality is high. However, when shareholders vote against executive compensation in Say-on-Pay, they also vote against the re-election of compensation committee members. The second connection of the model is between Say-on-Pay and non-GAAP reporting. The introduction of Say-on-Pay motivates managers to opportunistically report non-GAAP metrics. However, when managers report low-quality non-GAAP metrics, shareholders' Say-on-Pay votes become more negative. Thus, it appears that Say-on-Pay holds simultaneously a dual role as both a determinant and a consequence in its relation to compensation committee and non-GAAP reporting. Keywords: Say-on-Pay; Executive compensation; Non-GAAP earnings; Compensation committee quality; Interdependent directors; Director tenure; CEO directors; Director shareholdings; Additional directorships; Committee size.




Essays on Managerial Agency Problems


Book Description

This dissertation consists of two essays. The first essay examines how corporate payout policies and debt can be interchangeably used as substitutes in controlling free cash flow (FCF) problems. The roles of retained earnings/total equity (RE/TE) and various risk measures, such as equity beta, cash flow beta, and volatility are also analyzed in the choice of different payout policies as substitute for debt. Evidence suggests that firms with lower debt tend to payout more to control for free cash flow problems, and this relation is mainly driven by dividends, suggesting that dividends are more direct substitute to debt in controlling FCF problems. Also, the results support that RE/TE significantly affects dividends, but the substitution effect induced by FCF problems is unaffected by the inclusion of RE/TE. Furthermore, contrary to the recent literature, when leverage is considered, the effect of FCF problem on dividends dominates the effect of RE/TE. Therefore, FCF problem still plays a very important role in explaining firm's payouts. Furthermore while equity beta and RE/TE have symmetric effects on dividends and repurchases, cash flow beta has asymmetric effects. Cash flow beta weakens the degree of substitution between dividends and leverage in favor of repurchases. Even after controlling for RE/TE, size and equity beta, cash flow beta has a significant explanatory power for a firm's dividend payments. The second essay examines the behavior of managers who are endowed with executive stock options and investigates a possible distortion of corporate payout policy and its fixing mechanism. Executive managers awarded with large stock options may have an incentive to substitute repurchases for dividends in their payout policy and this may results in an agency problem between managers and shareholders. Surprisingly, dividend protection that can fix this distorted managerial incentive by compensating managers for the amount of dividend payments is rarely adopted in US. Various hypotheses are tested to explain the observed low dividend protection rate. First, the accounting consideration based on the EPS dilution effect is studied. Second, the relationship between executive options and dividends is estimated after controlling for possible endogeneity issues using structural models. Third, investors' preferences between dividends and repurchases over the past history are studied controlling for various firm characteristics. Evidence suggests that while option grants makes executives more likely to pay out through repurchases, there is a concurring trend in investors' preferences. Taken together, the aligned preferences of managers and investors towards repurchases can help explain the observed low dividend protection rates.




Three Essays on Valuation


Book Description