The impact of Chief Financial Officer overconfidence on corporate decisions

This thesis investigates the effects of Chief Financial Officer (CFO) overconfidence on corporate decisions. The thesis specifically explores: if overconfident CFOs use earnings management, what influence CFO overconfidence has on conditional accounting conservatism, and how overconfident CFOs impac...

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Main Author: Qiao, Lu
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/71696/
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author Qiao, Lu
author_facet Qiao, Lu
author_sort Qiao, Lu
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description This thesis investigates the effects of Chief Financial Officer (CFO) overconfidence on corporate decisions. The thesis specifically explores: if overconfident CFOs use earnings management, what influence CFO overconfidence has on conditional accounting conservatism, and how overconfident CFOs impact stock price crash risk. Through the lens of upper echelons and overconfidence theories and based on a large sample size of U.S.-listed firms, this thesis finds that overconfident CFOs use accrual-based earnings management (AEM) due to their high risk-taking incentives and low career concern. Overconfident CFOs engage in real earnings management (REM) as they underestimate the cost of deviating from optimal business strategies by using REM and overestimate their managerial ability to mitigate this cost of REM (Paper 1). Moreover, overconfident CFOs, particularly those with significant power, tend to reduce conditional accounting conservatism (Paper 2). Furthermore, firms led by overconfident CFOs increase future stock price crash risk (Paper 3). To increase the robustness of these findings, this thesis carries out a series of robustness tests, including using the entropy balance method, conducting difference-in-difference tests based on the propensity score matching sample, and changing the measure of main variables. After that, each paper, relying on power circulation and false consensus effect theories, further discusses the effect of overconfident CEOs on the relationship between CFO overconfidence and corporate decisions. Therefore, this thesis makes incremental contributions to the literature, theory, and practice. Specifically, these findings add a new determinant, CFO overconfidence, to earnings management, conditional accounting conservatism, and stock price crash risk literature. Besides, this study responds to calls from prior studies for more research to provide a deeper insight into CFO overconfidence and the joint effect of CEO overconfidence and CFO overconfidence, extending the overconfidence literature. The thesis also demonstrates the applicability of upper echelons, overconfidence, power circulation, and false consensus effect theories in the CFO overconfidence study. Lastly, this thesis has important implications for academia and practice in recognizing the pros and cons of CFO overconfidence in corporate decision.
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spelling nottingham-716962025-02-28T15:16:34Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/71696/ The impact of Chief Financial Officer overconfidence on corporate decisions Qiao, Lu This thesis investigates the effects of Chief Financial Officer (CFO) overconfidence on corporate decisions. The thesis specifically explores: if overconfident CFOs use earnings management, what influence CFO overconfidence has on conditional accounting conservatism, and how overconfident CFOs impact stock price crash risk. Through the lens of upper echelons and overconfidence theories and based on a large sample size of U.S.-listed firms, this thesis finds that overconfident CFOs use accrual-based earnings management (AEM) due to their high risk-taking incentives and low career concern. Overconfident CFOs engage in real earnings management (REM) as they underestimate the cost of deviating from optimal business strategies by using REM and overestimate their managerial ability to mitigate this cost of REM (Paper 1). Moreover, overconfident CFOs, particularly those with significant power, tend to reduce conditional accounting conservatism (Paper 2). Furthermore, firms led by overconfident CFOs increase future stock price crash risk (Paper 3). To increase the robustness of these findings, this thesis carries out a series of robustness tests, including using the entropy balance method, conducting difference-in-difference tests based on the propensity score matching sample, and changing the measure of main variables. After that, each paper, relying on power circulation and false consensus effect theories, further discusses the effect of overconfident CEOs on the relationship between CFO overconfidence and corporate decisions. Therefore, this thesis makes incremental contributions to the literature, theory, and practice. Specifically, these findings add a new determinant, CFO overconfidence, to earnings management, conditional accounting conservatism, and stock price crash risk literature. Besides, this study responds to calls from prior studies for more research to provide a deeper insight into CFO overconfidence and the joint effect of CEO overconfidence and CFO overconfidence, extending the overconfidence literature. The thesis also demonstrates the applicability of upper echelons, overconfidence, power circulation, and false consensus effect theories in the CFO overconfidence study. Lastly, this thesis has important implications for academia and practice in recognizing the pros and cons of CFO overconfidence in corporate decision. 2022-12-14 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en cc_by https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/71696/1/Revised%20%28final%29%20PhD%20thesis%20Lu%20Qiao%2014343408.pdf Qiao, Lu (2022) The impact of Chief Financial Officer overconfidence on corporate decisions. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. CFO overconfidence; Earnings management; Conditional accounting conservatism; Stock price crash risk
spellingShingle CFO overconfidence; Earnings management; Conditional accounting conservatism; Stock price crash risk
Qiao, Lu
The impact of Chief Financial Officer overconfidence on corporate decisions
title The impact of Chief Financial Officer overconfidence on corporate decisions
title_full The impact of Chief Financial Officer overconfidence on corporate decisions
title_fullStr The impact of Chief Financial Officer overconfidence on corporate decisions
title_full_unstemmed The impact of Chief Financial Officer overconfidence on corporate decisions
title_short The impact of Chief Financial Officer overconfidence on corporate decisions
title_sort impact of chief financial officer overconfidence on corporate decisions
topic CFO overconfidence; Earnings management; Conditional accounting conservatism; Stock price crash risk
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/71696/