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Executive Hubris: The Case of a Bank CEO

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Author(s)
Brennan, Niamh 
Conroy, John P. 
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/4962
Date Issued
2013
Date Available
20T09:10:44Z November 2013
Abstract
Purpose: Can personality traits of Chief Executive Officers (CEOs) be detected at-a-distance? Following newspaper speculation that the banking crisis of 2008 was partly caused by CEO hubris, this paper analyses the CEO letters to shareholders of a single bank over ten years for evidence of CEO personality traits, including: (i) narcissism (a contributor to hubris), (ii) hubris, (iii) overconfidence and (iv) CEO-attribution. Following predictions that hubris increases the longer individuals occupy positions of power, the research examines whether hubristic characteristics intensify over time.   Design/methodology/approach: This paper takes concepts of hubris from the clinical psychology literature and applies them to discourses in CEO letters to shareholders in annual reports. The research comprises a longitudinal study of the discretionary narrative disclosures in the CEO letters to shareholders in eight annual reports, benchmarked against disclosures in the CEO letters to shareholders of the previous and subsequent CEOs of the same organisation.   Findings: Results point to evidence of narcissism and hubris in the personality of the Bank CEO. Over half the sentences analysed were found to contain narcissistic-speak. In 45% of narcissistic-speak sentences, there were three of more symptoms of hubris ¿ what Owen and Davison (2009) describe as extreme hubristic behavior. In relation to CEO overconfidence, only seven (2%) sentences contained bad news. More than half of the good news was attributed to the CEO and all the bad news was attributed externally. The research thus finds evidence of hubris in the CEO letters to shareholders, which became more pronounced the longer the CEO served.   Research limitations/implications: The analysis of CEO discourse is highly subjective, and difficult to replicate.   Originality/value: The primary contribution of this research is the adaptation of the 14 clinical symptoms of hubris from clinical psychology to the analysis of narratives in CEO letters to shareholders in annual reports to reveal signs of CEO hubris.   Keywords Discretionary narrative disclosures, Annual reports, Narcissism, Hubris, CEOs, Social psychology
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Emerald
Journal
Accounting, Auditing and Accountability Journal
Volume
26
Issue
2
Start Page
172
End Page
195
Copyright (Published Version)
2013, Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Keywords
  • Annual reports

  • Chief executives

  • Discretionary narrati...

  • Hubris

  • Narcissism

  • Social psychology

DOI
10.1108/09513571311303701
Web versions
http://www.emeraldinsight.com/journals.htm?articleid=17077354&ini=aob
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/
Owning collection
Business Research Collection
Scopus© citations
56
Acquisition Date
Feb 5, 2023
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