Long-term firm gains from short-term managerial focus: Myopia and voluntary disclosures

Arya, A and Ramanan, R N V (2024) Long-term firm gains from short-term managerial focus: Myopia and voluntary disclosures. Journal of Accounting and Economics, 77 (2-3). p. 101646. ISSN 0165-4101

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Abstract

A CEO's short horizon and associated myopic actions are typically viewed as detrimental to the firm. In contrast, studying a voluntary disclosure model wherein capital market and product market strategic considerations are in play, we show that the CEO's myopic behavior can improve a firm's long-term value. In particular, the disclosures of a long-horizon CEO are seen as being entirely focused on the firm's interests and thus as being exploitative of customers. A short-horizon CEO myopically focused on short-term stock price is less aligned with the firm and, consequently, her disclosures are more customer friendly. As a corollary, when no disclosure is forthcoming, customers are less skeptical that the myopic CEO is withholding information to exploit them. This improves customers' willingness to pay with a myopic CEO, leading to higher firm profitability. The paper also layers in compensation design to derive the optimal degree of managerial short-term focus to induce.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Accounting
Date Deposited: 24 Apr 2025 06:30
Last Modified: 24 Apr 2025 06:30
URI: https://eprints.exchange.isb.edu/id/eprint/2375

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