Conglomerate Investment, Skewness, and the CEO Long Shot Bias

Schneider Christoph, Spalt Oliver


Abstract
Do behavioral biases of executives matter for corporate investment decisions? Using segment-level capital allocation in multisegment firms (“conglomerates”) as a laboratory, we show that capital expenditure is increasing in the expected skewness of segment returns. Conglomerates invest more in high-skewness segments than matched stand-alone firms, and trade at a discount, which indicates overinvestment that is detrimental to shareholder wealth. Using geographical variation in gambling norms, we find that the skewness-investment relation is particularly pronounced when CEOs are likely to find long shots attractive. Our findings suggest that CEOs allocate capital with a long-shot bias.

Keywords
Behavioral Corporate Finance; Skewness; Investment



Publication type
Research article (journal)

Peer reviewed
Yes

Publication status
Published

Year
2016

Journal
Journal of Finance

Volume
71

Issue
2

Start page
635

End page
672

Language
English

ISSN
0022-1082

DOI

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