Abstract: This paper examines why some employers provide matching contributions to 401(k) plans
in company stock and explores the implications of match policy for employee retirement
wealth. Unlike stock option grants to non-executives, a firm's decision to match in
company stock does not appear to be strongly correlated with cash flow or with measures
of the benefits of aligning incentives of employees and employers. Rather, we find
evidence that firms are more likely to provide the match in company stock if firm
risk is low (i.e. lower stock price volatility and lower bankruptcy risk) and employees
are also covered by a defined benefit plan. These findings suggest that firms consider
the retirement security of their workers in making the match decision, either because
firms want to minimize the risk of violating their fiduciary responsibility or because
employees more fully value company stock at companies with lower firm-specific risk.
Evidence also indicates that firms may want to match in company stock to boost employee
ownership, perhaps to help deter takeovers, or because of the tax advantages for dividends
on the company stock match. Simulation results suggest that sufficiently risk-tolerant
individuals actually prefer a 401(k) plan at a company with a company stock match to a
plan at a company with an unrestricted match, unless the equity premium is reduced
substantially.
Keywords: Pension, 401(k) plan, ESOP, company stock, match policy
Full paper (1627 KB PDF)
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Last update: June 1, 2004
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