01320nas a2200169 4500008004100000245009200041210006900133260000900202300001200211490000700223520073100230653001200961100002000973700001700993700002001010856012001030 2001 eng d00aThe Performance of Firms Before and After They Adopt Accounting-Based Performance Plans0 aPerformance of Firms Before and After They Adopt AccountingBased c2001 a205-2220 v413 aThis paper examines the long-run performance of firms before and after they adopt accounting-based performance plans. We test if the change in compensation policy is a response to a prior performance problem or is a signal to the market that firm performance will improve over current performance levels. Our findings are consistent with the signaling hypothesis. Stock prices increase at the announcement of the adoption of a performance plan apparently signaling previously private information regarding improved future performance. A related benefit of adoption may well be a better incentive-alignment contract for managers and shareholders but the strongest evidence points to a credible disclosure of future performance.10aFinance1 aBrooks, Raymond1 aMay, Don, O.1 aMishra, Chandra u/biblio/performance-firms-and-after-they-adopt-accounting-based-performance-plans-000499nas a2200145 4500008004100000245006700041210006400108260000900172300001000181490000600191653001200197100002000209700002000229856010400249 2000 eng d00aA Statistical Assessment of Accounting-Based Performance Plans0 aStatistical Assessment of AccountingBased Performance Plans c2000 a68-730 v910aFinance1 aBrooks, Raymond1 aMishra, Chandra u/biblio/statistical-assessment-accounting-based-performance-plans-0