To read this content please select one of the options below:

Uncertainty, risk, and real options: who wins, who loses?

Richard Reed (Center for Entrepreneurial Studies, College of Business, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington, USA)
Susan F. Storrud‐Barnes (Management and Labor Relations Department, Nance College of Business Administration, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, Ohio, USA)

Management Decision

ISSN: 0025-1747

Article publication date: 3 August 2010

1893

Abstract

Purpose

Real‐options have moved from being an academic theory to a decision‐making tool that is being used by managers. The thinking underpinning real options has remained true to its financial options‐pricing heritage, which means that it is based on an assumption of managerial risk‐neutrality. Managers can be risk‐seeking or risk‐averse, depending on whether or not they are meeting performance targets. This paper aims to explore the questions of what happens when the assumption of risk neutrality is relaxed and how the outcomes of managerial decisions on investments affect the firm's stockholders and bondholders.

Design/methodology/approach

The work is conceptual in its approach.

Findings

Managers, stockholders, or bondholders do not lose when managers are performing above target and when environmental uncertainty is high, or below target when environmental uncertainty is low, but managers win at the expense of stockholders when they are meeting performance targets and uncertainty is low, and managers win at the expense of bondholders when they are performing below target and uncertainty is high.

Research limitations/implications

Propositions are provided for subsequent empirical testing. The paper holds environmental complexity and munificence constant, but discusses the implication of that in the conclusions.

Practical implications

The research has implications for shareholders and bondholders. It also has implications for Boards of Directors and the actions they take within their monitoring and control duties.

Originality/value

Because the paper is able to separate the constructs of uncertainty and risk, this is the first work that has been able to fully relax the assumption of risk neutrality that underpins real‐options theory.

Keywords

Citation

Reed, R. and Storrud‐Barnes, S.F. (2010), "Uncertainty, risk, and real options: who wins, who loses?", Management Decision, Vol. 48 No. 7, pp. 1080-1089. https://doi.org/10.1108/00251741011068789

Publisher

:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2010, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Related articles