University of Wollongong
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Do co-opted boards increase insider profitability?

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-17, 15:57 authored by Dewan Rahman, Ihtisham Malik, Searat Ali, Jamshed Iqbal
Using a sample of U.S. firms over the period 1996–2014, this paper examines whether insider trading profitability increases with high board co-option. Indeed, we find that firms with a higher level of co-opted directors exhibit higher insider trading profitability, largely due to a lower level of managerial ability and analyst coverage. Co-opted boards are also unlikely to implement self-imposed insider trading restrictions, exacerbating this relationship. This positive association is mitigated by a higher level of external monitoring by institutional investors and if the CEO receives more performance-based incentives. Overall, co-opted directors demonstrate aligned interests with CEOs and corporate insiders rather than performing their role as monitors. As a result, a more co-opted board is positively associated with exploitative behaviour of insiders.

History

Journal title

Journal of Contemporary Accounting and Economics

Volume

17

Issue

3

Language

English

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