Inside the Firm: How Employee Knowledge and Ownership Shape Corporate Decisions
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Abstract
A large share of a firm’s day to day operations is carried out by rank and fileemployees, yet little is known about how their information and incentives shape
important corporate outcomes. In the first chapter, I assemble a new dataset
on Employee Stock Purchase Plan activity for a set of public firms and ask
whether non executives provide useful signals in mergers and acquisitions. I
find that acquirer abnormal returns and combined acquirer target synergies at
announcement both increase with the target firm’s non executive ESPP purchase
ratio, suggesting that employee trading behavior contains information about the
quality of the deal.
The second chapter examines whether employee ownership helps protect firms
from data breaches. Employees can observe and monitor one another in ways
managers cannot, and ownership strengthens this incentive. Using the share of
active ESOP participants as a measure of monitoring strength, I find that firms
with higher active ratios are less likely to experience data breaches, although
this effect weakens in larger firms. I also show that firms increase their active
ratio by about three percent after their first breach, and by six to ten percent
following breaches with impacts at least as large as the twenty fifth percentile in
their industry. Overall, the findings highlight the role of non executive employees
in shaping acquisition outcomes and helping firms manage operational risks.
Description
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2025
