AUGUST 2006
Tackling Corporate Governance
Managers, directors, and investors are all blamed for corporate missteps. David Larcker, who heads the School’s new corporate governance program, says GSB researchers are positioned to temper strong opinions with more facts.
by Deborah Lohse

Prof. David Larcker
Photo by Oliver Laude
After more than 20 years of researching corporate governance and
executive compensation issues, David Larcker is unconvinced that a
simplistic set of dos and don’ts can be slapped onto the boards, managers,
and auditors of the thousands of publicly traded companies in the United
States. That’s not to say that the director of the new corporate governance
program in the Business School’s Center for Leadership Development and
Research doesn’t believe in imposing rules to force managers or boards to do
the right thing for shareholders. But this 55-year-old accounting professor,
who rides motorcycles and favors the music of the Grateful Dead, has spent
decades rigorously testing which corporate governance tenets actually
improve a company’s stock price or its long-term growth prospects—and which
don’t.
• Do you recall that post-Enron warning about never letting a company’s
auditing firm also do consulting work? That’s not really a big problem for
the vast majority of companies, Larcker found and reported with a colleague
in 2004.
• If the board of your favorite company meets the latest criteria for being
independent from management, it can be counted on to pay the CEO
objectively, right? Probably not if it’s one of the 5 percent of boards
studied by Larcker where undisclosed board interrelationships seem to result
in outsized executive pay.
• What about the theory that the more stock a CEO holds in his own company,
the more his interests are aligned with those of shareholders? Not
necessarily true. Chances are some CEOs with a lot of stock are quietly
hedging away 20 percent or more of their holdings, according to a study
under way by the School’s Alan Jagolinzer, an assistant professor, and
Larcker, the James Irvin Miller Professor of Accounting.
The rise of corporate governance as a topic of study, many say, traces back
to a seminal study in 1932 by lawyer Adolf Berle and economist Gardiner
Means, who laid out in The Modern Corporation and Private Property the way
in which the stockholding owners of powerful corporations, such as
automobile makers, had become separated from the controllers, or management,
of the corporations. The pair warned, presciently, that managers often had
different incentives for how to spend corporate assets than shareholders.
And boards of directors, who were supposed to be the voice of the
shareholder, were often complacent or too cozy with management to step in.
But rather than serving as a call to arms for shareholders to exercise their
power for change, Berle and Means’ work was met with a “what-can-you-do?”
reaction, says Nell Minow of the Corporate Library, a corporate governance
research and analysis firm.
“The accepted wisdom was the Wall Street rule: You vote with management, or
you sell the stock,” she says. Those who might have wanted changes to any
unfriendly shareholder practices found it insurmountably difficult to get
pertinent corporate information, launch a proxy fight, or otherwise exert
influence over managements or boards.
Insulated from investors, then, and not yet laden with the levels of debt
that would later force companies to focus on return on investment, corporate
leaders went on an acquisition binge in the 1960s and early 1970s. Part of
the impetus was that novice investors were picking stocks on relatively
simplistic measures like earnings per share—and CEOs got paid on size. That
helped lead to the era of conglomerates like International Telephone &
Telegraph, which owned everything from car rental outfits to frozen food
companies.
The new conglomerates led to two things that became highly controversial in
the early 1980s and which proved pivotal in corporate governance history:
Corporate leaders started to make previously unheard-of seven-figure
salaries, and corporate raiders like T. Boone Pickens saw that they could
buy unwieldy conglomerates, often financed with debt, and sell off the
pieces for fat profits.
“In the eighties, there was a lot of discussion about compensation, and this
sounds silly now, but people started getting queasy about the whole ‘this
guy’s making a million dollars in cash money’ thing,” Larcker says. “But
there really wasn’t any developed body of research where people said ‘OK, so
what? Is there any pay for performance?
If you see these people change from one type of contract to another, does it
really matter?’”
Having spent his early academic career writing on a wide array of
managerial accounting and auditing subjects, Larcker began turning his focus
to executive compensation in the 1980s, especially to whether the financial
incentives or motivators implemented by companies really did improve
spending decisions and long-term stock prices.
In 1983, he wrote an influential paper that helped confirm the value of a
new breed of compensation called long-term performance plans.
“Basically, what you found out was once companies instituted this long-term
stuff, managers did act a lot more long term,” he says. “They spent more on
capital expenditures, and the stock price bumped up.”
During this time, too, corporations were scrambling to fend off raiders: One
researcher found that about half of all corporations got a takeover offer,
and those that didn’t felt they had to put up defenses against them. Among
the corporate measures that raised the hackles of investors were messy
“poison-pill” plans that made a takeover costly for acquirers by flooding
the market with new shares in the event of unwelcome share offers.
Research at the time focused on the wisdom of the corporate defenses.
Larcker wrote what he believes was the first such paper on so-called golden
parachutes, the severance packages that would pay fat sums to executives if
their companies got taken over. Derided at the time as being grabby payoffs
for failed managers, Larcker found that in fact, golden parachutes served a
useful purpose: removing a CEO’s incentive to sabotage a good takeover
because of concerns that he or she would be ousted in the deal.
The modern era of corporate governance debate has focused on the gigantic
payouts that have stemmed from moving so heavily to stock-based compensation
and the high-profile governance failures in which a small number of
executives managed to twist the system for their own eight- or nine-figure
windfalls. Congress, legislators, and researchers have scrambled to impose,
assess, and justify new rules to prevent repeats of corporate outrages such
as Enron or WorldCom.
In a 2003 paper Larcker tackled a subject near and dear to Silicon
Valley—stock options. He found that, contrary to the Valley battle cry that
broad-based stock option grants build a loyal workforce, corpo-rate
performance is not measurably improved by granting options below a certain
employee level.
Some of the biggest rule changes, which he wants to test for effectiveness,
are in the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. The law imposed strict new rules and
liabilities on executives, boards, board audit committees, outside auditors,
and others. “It would be great to do a really rigorous study quantifying the
costs and benefits of Sarbanes-Oxley,” he says.
Former commissioner of the Securities and Exchange Commission
Joe Grundfest
says that Larcker, who worked briefly as an engineer before his academic
career, is “one of the leading people in the field of analysis of executive
compensation, option compensation, and a host of management accounting
issues.” Now a Stanford law professor, Grundfest is codirector with Larcker
and Law School Professor Robert Daines of the new Rock Center for Corporate Governance.
In March, just eight months after Larcker made the move from Wharton,
Stanford announced the formation of the Rock Center, which was funded with
$10 million from Valley entrepreneur Arthur Rock and his wife, Toni Rembe.
The clout of the center became apparent in early 2006, after the Securities
and Exchange Commission (sec) announced its most extensive proposal in 14
years for disclosing executive pay. Within a month of its founding, Rock
Center leaders had convened a daylong seminar in Washington, D.C., attended
by dozens of the top experts on the subject, including investors,
consultants, researchers, company executives, and regulators. They spoke for
hours to three of the four sec commissioners following a kickoff speech by
chairman Christopher Cox.
“They have such tremendous Rolodexes,” says David Chun, formerly a student
of Larcker’s at Wharton, now CEO of compensation re-search provider Equilar.
“With a month’s notice they decided they were going to do a conference, and
all these people showed up. It shows their access to thought leaders.”
As the Business School’s new lead man for a program designed to make headway
on many fronts of corporate governance, Larcker says he is pleased that
nearly two dozen School faculty members have an ongoing interest in this
area. The Rock Center and the GSB’s corporate governance program are likely
to involve more than a dozen Business School faculty, in addition to faculty
from the schools of Law, Engineering, and Humanities and Sciences.
Many legal researchers and advocates for reform tend to assume, without
rigorous research to back it up, that the rules will effect change at all
corporations in mostly the same way. Larcker is hoping the Stanford team’s
interdisciplinary research will broaden the thinking of regulators,
shareholder advocates, and others to look at corporate governance not having
a uniform solution.
He also feels better results will come from starting from scratch with an
“agnostic” approach that includes getting inside companies and testing. For
that, Larcker hopes to enlist the help of Business School alumni who lead
corporations, including those at private companies. Even without a stock
price with which to measure performance, he says, researchers can study how
private companies instill governance checks and balances and how nonprofits
cope with conflicts of interest between those who donate money, say, and
those charged with managing and dispensing it.
“My view is we’ve learned a lot, but we haven’t progressed that far in
understanding corporate governance,” he says. “We can do this at Stanford
because the alumni are very tied to the School.”
The inside-out approach is one Larcker has used before, says former Wharton
colleague Bob Holthausen. “One of the things that Dave’s been very good at
is getting himself inside organizations,” Holthausen says.
Besides studying companies that are doing well, Larcker wants to do
postmortems on corporate blowups. “Let’s find cases when there were problems
and ask, ‘Was that really a governance thing, and what did you do in
response—other than firing the CEO and CFO?’”
Good governance needs to focus on all areas of a corporation, Larcker feels,
which is where Stanford’s multiple disciplinary research will contribute.
How do performance goals set by a company’s operations departments affect
the ability of a CEO to meet goals set by his board, for instance? What does
behavioral research by noted professors like the Business School’s Charles
O’Reilly and Jeffrey Pfeffer reveal about how employees react to change, and
how should that be incorporated by those setting standards for corporate
governance?
“One thing that’s pretty exciting on our end is that we think the governance
analysis and ideas actually have the possibility of forcing a lot of
people—OB [organizational behavior], accounting, operations, marketing,
finance—all the groups within a company or within the research community to
actually work together,” he says. “It’s not one size fits all.”
Larcker dreams of having a dynamic, changing set of rules, best-practices
lists, or standards that would rise up or recede for a given company or set
of companies depending on what years of research show is most effective. No
more, perhaps, would regulators look for simple answers to executive pay,
like discouraging cash pay over
$1 million by making it non–tax-deductible to the corporation, as Congress
did in 1993.
Instead, rigorous back-testing of corporate practices might show that pay
boundaries should depend on the corporate profile. Corporations should
probably limit the pay of a “caretaker” CEO running a company that has
changed little in risk or business model in decades, Larcker hypothesizes.
But what about the CEO hired to take big risks and move a company into
uncharted technologies or countries?
There’s probably an ideal mix of rewards and incentives that could be proven
to be effective in such cases, Larcker expects. And what about the situation
that confounds most compensation experts: that of a founding CEO like
Oracle’s Larry Ellison, who reaped a controversial $74 million last year in
pay and stock gains. Case studies would likely prove that “the truth of the
matter is … he’s worth whatever he wants to get paid,” Larcker says.
Larcker also believes that the impact of operational risk—normally the
purview of researchers of strategic management and organizational
behavior—can’t be left out of any studies that aim to set best practices for
how a board should be run, how managers should be paid, and what governance
rules a company should set for itself. He defines operational risk as the
“what-if-something-goes-wrong questions,” which boards, not just managers,
need to consider, he says. At banks, for instance, “if you’ve got a glitch
in processing transactions, it could have tremendous ramifications for the
return of the bank.” A company’s inadvertently leaving itself exposed to
such costly risks—which Congress tried to fix by requiring a tedious
cataloging under Sarbanes-Oxley’s Section 404—could certainly negate all the
purported good effects of having the right number of board meetings or any
other corporate governance, Larcker reasons.
Can an integrated research approach be accomplished? “I hope so,” Larcker
says. “If you can’t do it with the kind of talent you have here at Stanford
across the board, it’s just hard to imagine it can be done anywhere.”
New Research Directions
Look for research from Business School corporate governance researchers in these areas:
• A study of the labor market for CEOs, to figure out if the rising tide
of CEO pay is a natural or unnatural market phenomenon. “Maybe it’s the case
that the labor market for CEOs is really broken,” Professor David Larcker
says. “If that’s the case then, you can’t really rely on that market to
provide any kind of discipline on pay matters.”
• An analysis by professors Alan Jagolinzer and Larcker of how CEOs and
other executives don’t really own the level of stock they appear to own
because of complex hedging strategies that aren’t easily discerned from
corporate documents. Already, research is indicating that above certain
ownership levels, CEOs often have nullified 20 percent of their holdings
through offsetting investments.
The interesting question, Larcker says, is “are they hedging because they
want to diversify a concentrated level of ownership in their company’s
stock, or are they hedging because they don’t think the stock will
outperform the market?” Early indications are the latter, he says: Hedging
appears to be a sign that executives believe “the stock price may go up, but
not as much as if you were in a market portfolio.”
• A study by doctoral student Christopher Armstrong, Jagolinzer, and Larcker
into the true cost to 10 companies of granting stock options to employees.
By examining the actual, not assumed, rate at which employees exercised
their option grants, the research is showing that traditional option
measurement tools overstated the cost of options to some employees by 30
percent to 50 percent.
• Projects aimed at discovering the characteristics of corporations that are
more likely than others to commit fraud.
One project would take proprietary data from two of the four largest
auditing firms and examine where and how they internally identify companies
that are at risk of fraudulent or overly risky behavior. Then, Larcker wants
to see how they change their audits in response.
“The sec is super-interested in this,” he says. “If you found out that there
are certain kinds of board structures, ownership structures, or audits that
are conducive to fraud, that would be something you could identify and
presumably you could fix.”
Another study, by Maureen McNichols, the Marriner S. Eccles Professor of
Public and Private Management, would look at speech patterns of CEOs for
signs of when a CEO is covering up. “Do they use first-person pronouns? Is
it passive tense? How complex is the story?” says Larcker, who said the aim
could be to come up with an “obfuscation index.” He and McNichols codirect
the School’s executive education program for board members of publicly
traded corporations.
Deborah Lohse is a city hall reporter for the San Jose Mercury News who has previously covered business and corporate governance topics.
FEATURES IN THIS ISSUE
- The Decision Tree of Family Business
- Tackling Corporate Governance
- Calculating Ways to Stop Terrorists
- Bumpy Road to Savoir Faire
- Profile: Ivan Png, PhD '85
Related Information
Historic Dates
Key Dates in U.S. Corporate Governance History
1933–1934
In the wake of the 1929 market crash and the Great Depression,
Congress creates the Securities Act of 1933, which requires registration and
disclosures about stocks and bonds being sold to investors, and prohibits
deceit in the sale of securities. The Securities Exchange Act of 1934
creates the Securities and Exchange Commission as the nation’s securities
industry regulator.
1968
The Williams Act imposes new rules on tender offers for companies by
requiring bidders to pay the same price to all shareholders and disclose the
source of cash. It also gives shareholders time to make up their minds.
1970s
States pass anti-takeover laws requiring more notice and giving
state regulators power to delay takeovers. Many laws are later struck down
by the U.S. Supreme Court.
Mid-1980s
Institutional Shareholder Services and the Corporate Library are
formed to create corporate governance ratings and analysis of publicly
traded companies.
1993
Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code forbids corporations from
deducting from their taxes compensation over $1 million for the CEO and top
four executives unless that compensation is performance based.
2002
After Enron and WorldCom implode, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act imposes new
rules on boards of directors, new disclosure and personal liabilities on
CEOs and CFOs, and more recording and testing of corporate risk factors.
2006
The Securities and Exchange Commission considers broad new
disclosures about executive pay, including details of severance and
retirement plans and perquisites.
Sources: Websites of the Securities Industry Association, Institutional
Shareholder Services, the Corporate Library, and the Securities and Exchange
Commission.
Sources: Websites of the Securities Industry Association, Institutional Shareholder Services, the Corporate Library , and the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Related Reading
Armstrong, C.S., A.D. Jagolinzer, and D.F. Larcker. “Employee Exercise Behavior and Stock Option Valuation,” 2006 working paper.
Berle, A., and G. Means. The Modern Corporation and Private Property. Reprint Edition. Piscataway, N.J.: Transaction Publishers, 1991.
Ittner, C.D., R.A. Lambert, and D.F. Larcker. “The Structure and Performance Consequences of Equity Grants to Employees of New Economy Firms,” Journal of Accounting and Economics, Vol. 34 (January 2003), pp. 89–127.
Lambert, R.A., and D.F. Larcker. “Golden Parachutes, Executive Decision-Making, and Shareholder Wealth,” Journal of Accounting and Economics, Vol. 7, No. 1–3 (April 1985), pp. 179–203.
Larcker, D.F. “The Association Between Performance Plan Adoption and Corporate Capital Investment,” Journal of Accounting and Economics, Vol. 5, No. 1 (April 1983), pp. 3–30.
Larcker, D.F., and S.A. Richardson. “Fees Paid to Audit Firms, Accrual Choices, and Corporate Governance,” Journal of Accounting Research, Vol. 42, No. 3 (June 2004), pp. 625–658.
Larcker, D.F, S.A. Richardson, A.J. Seary, and I. Tuna. “Director Networks, Executive Compensation, and Firm Performance,” 2006 working paper.