Good News Gladly Waits For CEOs

International Business Times

Published Sep 29, 2014 12:34PM ET

Updated Sep 29, 2014 04:00PM ET

Good News Gladly Waits For CEOs

By Angelo Young - Companies sometimes delay the release of good news about performance to maximize the amount of money CEOs get from selling their shares, according to a study of regulatory filings released Monday by the National Bureau of Economic Research, a nonprofit organization devoted to economic analysis.

Company news moves stock prices, which is why trading rules require market-moving news to be released to everyone at the same time. A level playing field, the logic goes, is important for giving all investors equal access to company information so everyone has a fair shot at buying or selling stock. But companies get to decide when some news is released to the public and the timing can play a crucial role in allowing executives to gain the most value from their shares.

“The news releases [with positive tones] lead to temporary increases in the stock price and trading volume,” the 49-page report concluded. “CEOs exploit these temporary effects.”

The practice underscores the inherent advantage company insiders have over everyone else when trading stock in the companies they oversee and offers strong evidence corporate press releases are sometimes delayed to boost CEO pay. Meanwhile, investors are buying or selling the company’s shares without access to information CEOs withhold for personal financial gain.

The research conducted by economists from the U.S., U.K., France and Singapore looked at U.S. regulatory filings from 1994 to 2005 and identified instances where CEOs were granted stock or stock options to sell at a later specified date, usually three to four years later. Then they looked at when those shares were sold from 2006 to 2011 and looked for any correlation between the releases of company news and when CEOs sold their stock.