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Do Managerial Risk-taking Incentives Influence Firms' Exchange Rate Exposure?

There is scant evidence on how risk-taking incentives impact specific firm risks. This has implications for board oversight of managerial risk taking, firms' development of comparative advantage in taking particular risks, and compensation design. We examine this question for exchange rate risk. Using multiple identification strategies, we find that vega increases exchange rate exposure for purely domestic and globally engaged firms. Vega's impact increases with international operations, declines post-SOX, and is robust to firm-level governance. Our results suggest that evidence that exposure reduces firm value can be viewed, in part, as a wealth transfer from shareholders and debt-holders to managers.

01. October 2017

Authors Bill Francis Iftekhar Hasan Delroy M. Hunter Yun Zhu

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Professor Iftekhar Hasan, PhD
Professor Iftekhar Hasan, PhD
Economist

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