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Do Investors See Value in Ethically Sound CEO Apologies? Investigating Stock Market Reaction to CEO Apologies

机译:投资者是否从道德上合理的首席执行官致歉中看到价值?调查股票市场对首席执行官的道歉

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Since the late 1990s, the number of apologies being offered by CEOs of large companies has exploded (Lindner in Austin American-Statesman, 2007; Adams in USA Today, 2000). Communication and management scholars have analyzed whether and why some of these apologies are more effective or more ethical than others (Souder in Sci Eng Ethics 16:175-184, 2010; Benoit in Accounts, excuses, and apologies: a theory of image restoration strategies, 1995a; Benoit and Czerwinski in Bus Commun Q 60:38-57, 1997). Most of these analyses, however, have remained at the anecdotal level. Moreover, the practical, economic consequences of apologies have not been examined. Almost no rigorous or systematic empirical work exists that examines whether stakeholders (1) reward firms whose CEOs give apologies that are more, rather than less, ethical; and (2) punish firms whose corporate apologies are not ethically sound. This lacuna is surprising given that the whole purpose of an apology is to restore trust between the apologizer and the recipients of the apology. It is also surprising, given that stock market participants do appear, in at least some cases, to evaluate and respond to apologies by CEOs. When Johnson and Johnson was hit by the Tylenol poisonings, its stock price plummeted. One day after CEO James Burke's apology-an apology widely praised for being ethically sound-approximately a half billion dollars of its previously lost stock value was restored (The financial effect of Burke's 1982 apology was calculated using Eventus data for a window -1, +1 days around the date of the actual apology.). It appears, then, that a good CEO apology may lead to an increased stock value ceteris paribus. But is the Johnson and Johnson case representative of how the market responds in general to CEO apologies?.
机译:自1990年代后期以来,大公司的首席执行官提出的道歉数量激增(Linner,奥斯汀美国政治家,2007年; Adams,今日美国,2000年)。传播和管理学者分析了其中的一些道歉是否比其他道歉更有效,更合乎道德(Souder in Sci Eng Ethics 16:175-184,2010; Benoit in Accounts,借口和道歉:一种图像恢复策略理论) ,1995a; Benoit和Czerwinski在Bus Commun Q 60:38-57,1997)。但是,大多数这些分析仍处于传闻水平。此外,尚未审查道歉的实际,经济后果。几乎没有严格的或系统的实证研究可用来检验利益相关者(1)是否奖励那些其CEO道歉多于道德的公司; (2)惩罚公司道歉不合乎道德的公司。鉴于道歉的全部目的是恢复道歉者与道歉接受者之间的信任,因此这一不足之处令人惊讶。鉴于至少在某些情况下,股票市场参与者确实出现了对首席执行官的道歉进行评估和回应的态度,这也是令人惊讶的。当强生公司被泰诺中毒打击时,其股价暴跌。在首席执行官詹姆斯·伯克(James Burke)道歉之后的第二天,道歉被道歉,因为道歉符合道德规范,大约恢复了其先前损失的股票价值的五亿美元(伯克1982年道歉的财务影响是使用Eventus数据计算的,窗口为-1,+在实际道歉日期前后1天。)。如此看来,良好的CEO道歉可能会导致股票价值的贬低。但是强生公司的案例是否代表了市场对首席执行官道歉的总体反应?

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