Content area

Abstract

Numerous studies to date have addressed short-term returns earned by insiders with mixed results. Longer-term performance of executives and directors, however, has not been addressed in the literature. In essay one, I investigate whether insiders actually earn abnormal returns in the long-run by deriving a more accurate and comprehensive measure of insiders' realized returns. Key results from insiders' dollar-weighted returns, which explicitly account for capital flow timing and magnitude from all SEC-reported insider transactions, show that insiders fail to earn abnormal returns in their overall portfolio during their tenure with the firm. In essay two, I examine option exercise behaviors that have not been addressed in prior literature. This includes an analysis of exercised options and available-but-unexercised options, a comparison between multiple and single exercises, as well as a comparison between fractional and full exercises. I also investigate factors associated with the decision to exercise, the decision to exercise multiple options, and the decision to exercise the entire option grants at each exercise date.

Details

Title
Two essays on insider trading: Empirical examinations of long-run insider returns and insiders' options exercise behavior
Author
Simpson, Thuy H.
Year
2013
Publisher
ProQuest Dissertations Publishing
ISBN
978-1-303-03085-7
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1351382418
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.