Written by students who passed Immediately available after payment Read online or as PDF Wrong document? Swap it for free 4.6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Presentation

John Core & Wayne Guay (1999). The use of equity grants to manage optimal equity incentive levels effectively?

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
19
Uploaded on
08-04-2026
Written in
2025/2026

Finance research paper presentation slides. This presentation summarizes the study by John Core & Wayne Guay (1999) on how firms use annual equity grants, including stock options and restricted stock, to manage optimal CEO incentive levels. Slides cover main idea, motivation, research questions (how firms establish CEO equity incentives, adjustments for deviations, substitution for cash compensation), methodology (ExecuComp, CRSP, Compustat data; OLS, Tobit, Heckman two-stage models; Black-Scholes option pricing; firm-specific fixed-effects), key results (CEO incentives increase with firm size, growth opportunities, monitoring costs; dynamic adjustment of new grants based on deviations; financial constraints influence grant size; robustness checks), assessment of methodological choices (strengths and limitations of OLS, Tobit, and Heckman models; suggested improvements with IV, GMM, quantile regression, PSM/DiD), and conclusions (equity grants are used effectively to maintain optimal CEO incentives). Designed for students who need ready-to-use, detailed analysis with graphs, tables, and discussion points.

Show more Read less
Institution
Course

Content preview

The use of equity grants to
manage optimal
equity incentive levels
John Core & Wayne Guay (1999)

, Main Questions of the Article
The paper investigates how rms use annual grants of stock options and
restricted stock to CEOs.

Primary question - do the rms use them as a tool to manage the optimal level of
equity incentives?

Particular questions:

1. How do rms establish CEO equity incentives (what are the main factors) and
how do rms adjust them if there are some deviations from the optimal levels?

2. Do rms use equity grants as a substitution for cash-based compensation?



fi fi
fi fi fi

, Motivation of the Authors
The study is built on previous Previous research, for example,
studies, such as Jensen and Yermack (1995) and Ofek and
Meckling (1976) and Demsetz Yermack (1997), gave a mixed
and Lehn (1985). These earlier answers to the question - how
works showed that optimal rms actually grant equity
CEO equity ownership levels incentives and is it consistent
are connected with rm’s with the theory of optimal
characteristics, such as size, contracting or not?
growth opportunities, and
monitoring costs.

fi

fi

Written for

Institution
Course

Document information

Uploaded on
April 8, 2026
Number of pages
19
Written in
2025/2026
Type
PRESENTATION
Person
Unknown

Subjects

$16.49
Get access to the full document:

Wrong document? Swap it for free Within 14 days of purchase and before downloading, you can choose a different document. You can simply spend the amount again.
Written by students who passed
Immediately available after payment
Read online or as PDF

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
ponkratovvv1980

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
ponkratovvv1980 Harvard University
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
-
Member since
3 months
Number of followers
0
Documents
32
Last sold
-

0.0

0 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Working on your references?

Create accurate citations in APA, MLA and Harvard with our free citation generator.

Working on your references?

Frequently asked questions