articleThe Journal of FinanceNov 11, 2008Closed access

Overconfidence, CEO Selection, and Corporate Governance

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Abstract

ABSTRACT We develop a model that shows that an overconfident manager, who sometimes makes value‐destroying investments, has a higher likelihood than a rational manager of being deliberately promoted to CEO under value‐maximizing corporate governance. Moreover, a risk‐averse CEO's overconfidence enhances firm value up to a point, but the effect is nonmonotonic and differs from that of lower risk aversion. Overconfident CEOs also underinvest in information production. The board fires both excessively diffident and excessively overconfident CEOs. Finally, Sarbanes‐Oxley is predicted to improve the precision of information provided to investors, but to reduce project investment.

Citation impact

809
total citations
FWCI
41.45
Percentile
100%
References
63
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Overconfidence effect
  • Corporate governance
  • Enterprise value
  • Risk aversion (psychology)
  • Value (mathematics)
  • Business
  • Sarbanes–Oxley Act
  • Selection (genetic algorithm)
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