Critical Finance Review > Vol 13 > Issue 3-4

Employee Compensation Still Impacts Payout Policy

Alice Bonaimé, Eller College of Management, University of Arizona, USA, alicebonaime@arizona.edu , Kathleen Kahle, Eller College of Management, University of Arizona, USA, kkahle@arizona.edu , David Moore, Loyola Marymount University, USA, david.moore@lmu.edu , Alok Nemani, Bentley University, USA, anemani@bentley.edu
 
Suggested Citation
Alice Bonaimé, Kathleen Kahle, David Moore and Alok Nemani (2024), "Employee Compensation Still Impacts Payout Policy", Critical Finance Review: Vol. 13: No. 3-4, pp 419-463. http://dx.doi.org/10.1561/104.00000145

Publication Date: 12 Aug 2024
© 2024 Alice Bonaimé, Kathleen Kahle, David Moore, and Alok Nemani
 
Subjects
 
Keywords
G30G32G35
Share repurchasesDividendsPayout policyStock optionsRestricted stockEmployee compensationEarnings dilution
 

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In this article:
1. Introduction 
2. Hypothesis Development 
3. Data and Summary Statistics 
4. Stock-based Compensation and Payout Policy 
5. The Frequency of Repurchases 
6. Conclusion 
References 

Abstract

Employee compensation may impact payout policy by (i) incentivizing managers with non-dividend-protected options to favor repurchases over dividends and (ii) diluting earnings, which firms can neutralize through share repurchases. Both the dividend-protection and dilution channels imply a positive relation between stock options and repurchases. Yet, recent studies and trends suggest repurchases do not decline when option usage falls around mandatory option expensing, casting doubt upon a causal relation between equity compensation and payout. We examine this relation in light ofthe shift from options to restricted stock. Our results strongly support a positive relation between compensation and share repurchases via the dilution channel; dividend protection has no first-order effect on payout. Difference-in-differences analyses using a shock to compensation around mandatory option expensing and an instrumental variable approach suggest that the relation between dilution and payout is likely causal. Further, as the dilution channel predicts, equity compensation positively relates to repurchase frequency and timing.

DOI:10.1561/104.00000145

Online Appendix | 104.00000145_app.pdf

This is the article’s accompanying appendix.

DOI: 10.1561/104.00000145_app