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Attractive CEOs have “a positive and significant impact on
stock returns" when they first appear on television, according to a
working paper by Joseph T. Halford and Hung-Chia Hsu at the University of Wisconsin.
"Our findings suggest that more attractive CEOs have higher
compensation because they create more value for shareholders through
better negotiating prowess and visibility," they said. When better-looking
execs appear on TV, their stock gets an exaggerated bump. Comely CEOs
also snag better terms in mergers with other companies.
Blame the boards for shallowness if you like. But if
economic partners, like traders and executives, are going to be
suckered by good looks anyway, you might as well pay extra for it.
The problem is that the right look is often valued for
the wrong reasons. "Mature-looking" CEOs are presumed to be more
competent, according to another study by John R. Graham, Campbell R. Harvey and Manju Puri. But
while beautiful faces might actually be more valuable for their
companies, there's nothing special about wizened heads or the brains
inside them. "Psychology research shows that baby-faced-looking
people often possess qualities opposite to those projected by their
facial traits," the researchers write (and this author cheers the
finding). Mature-looking CEOs aren't any better at their jobs. They're
just better at looking like they're better.
Paying for pulchritude isn't limited to Wall Street.
Research shows that attractive people are widely perceived to be more
competent leaders, harder negotiators, and smarter workers. According to
Daniel Hamermesh, an economist who spent two decades researching the
financial effects of being a hottie, the top third of attractive men earn 4 percent more than intellectually similar (but average-looking) men. The ugliest guys make 13 percent less. For the typical worker, that would add up to $230,000 "beauty premium" over a career.
Hamermesh's work fleshes out something old and intuitive:
Making decisions is hard, and we often rely on our first impressions.
Some people look trust-worthy, and some people look like crooks. Some
people look like they can be president, and some people are Dennis
Kucinich. Cute students are rated as smarter than uglier students,
older-looking people seem more mature, and taller people seem more
authoritative. The economics benefits of height (particularly for men)
are so widely established that the Harvard economist Greg Mankiw once
cheekily suggested a Tallness Tax to level the playing field.
First impressions are short-cuts, but sometimes our instincts are off. In one study of hedge funds, Ankur
Pareek and Roy Zuckerman found that managers that looked more
trustworthy attracted more funds, but there was "no evidence that
perceived trustworthiness predicts actual manager skill." In fact, the
trusty-seeming managers generated worse returns. The same principle
appears in the peer-to-peer lending market, where Enrichetta Ravina found that pretty women, in particular, get cheaper loans, despite being more likely to default.
There are at least two levels of bias baked into the
"beauty premium," as Daniel Hamermesh calls it. The first level is
personal: We are, like Ralph Waldo, drawn to beauty and want to trust in
it. The second level is strategic: Understanding that most people are
drawn to beautiful faces, companies in the business of making
impressions will pay a bonus for them. It might not be rational to give
an attractive couple a favorable interest rate or loan term. But boards
are just trying to raise their market cap by betting on the wisdom, or
foolishness, of the crowd—which is repeatedly biased toward giving
good-looking people the benefit of the doubt. Of all the weird financial
benefits of good looks, the bloated pay packages of beautiful CEOs
might be one of the least irrational.
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