Incentive Contracting under Ambiguity-Aversion

34 Pages Posted: 11 Oct 2012 Last revised: 26 Feb 2017

See all articles by Qi Liu

Qi Liu

Peking University - Department of Finance

Lei Lu

University of Manitoba

Bo Sun

University of Virginia Darden School of Business

Multiple version iconThere are 2 versions of this paper

Date Written: November 11, 2016

Abstract

This paper studies a principal-agent model in which the information on future firm performance is ambiguous and the agent is averse to ambiguity. We show that if firm risk is ambiguous, while stocks always induce the agent to perceive a high risk, options can induce him to perceive a low risk. As a result, options can be less costly in incentivizing the agent than stocks in the presence of ambiguity. In addition, we show that providing the agent with more incentives would induce the agent to perceive a higher risk, and there is a discontinuous jump in the compensation cost as incentives increase, which makes the principal reluctant to reset contracts frequently when underlying fundamentals change. Thus, compensation contracts exhibit an inertia property. Lastly, the model sheds some light on the use of relative performance evaluation, and provides a rationale for the puzzle of pay-for-luck in the presence of ambiguity.

Keywords: ambiguity, executive compensation, options

JEL Classification: G30, J33

Suggested Citation

Liu, Qi and Lu, Lei and Sun, Bo, Incentive Contracting under Ambiguity-Aversion (November 11, 2016). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2160091 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2160091

Qi Liu (Contact Author)

Peking University - Department of Finance ( email )

Beijing
China

Lei Lu

University of Manitoba ( email )

Bo Sun

University of Virginia Darden School of Business ( email )

100 Darden Blvd
K, VA 22903
United States
8622453813 (Phone)

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