CEOs who endured childhood disasters show greater appetite for risky debt, study finds
John E. Kaye
- Published
- News

A new study of more than 2,000 US-born executives finds that childhood trauma leaves a lasting mark on financial choices, pushing some CEOs toward riskier debt structures and greater independence from lenders
Chief executives who experienced natural disasters between the ages of five and 15 are significantly more likely to favour public debt over bank loans, taking on more risk and less oversight in how they finance their companies, according to new research.
A study by Vlerick Business School, Sichuan Agricultural University, the University of Essex and the University of Nottingham, examined early exposure to earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, tsunamis, hurricanes, tornadoes, severe storms, floods, landslides, extreme temperatures and wildfires.
Firms led by these trauma-experienced CEOs were found to hold, on average, 13.6 per cent more public debt and 19.3 per cent less bank debt than their peers. The shift is said to be driven by a preference for autonomy and a reduced tolerance for external monitoring – traits linked to early exposure to life-threatening uncertainty.
“‘What doesn’t kill you, makes you stronger’ and in the case of CEOs with early-life disaster experience, this often translates to an increased appetite for risk.” Professor Thanos Verousis of Vlerick Business School, a co-author of the study, said.
Unlike banks, which monitor borrowers closely through regular oversight, public bondholders are fragmented and less able to intervene.
“Higher risk typically demands more external financing and invites tighter monitoring from creditors. CEOs aware of this trade-off may strategically opt for public debt precisely because it enables greater capital access while avoiding the intense scrutiny and control that come with bank loans,” Vlerick added.
“CEOs shaped by early-life disasters appear to value independence over oversight, often in ways that align with risk-seeking behaviour and short-term opportunity maximisation.”
The researchers manually tracked the early-life experiences of 2,000+ US-born CEOs, cross-referencing disaster records with biographical data and corporate debt structures from over 3,500 firm-year observations.
Just 11.7 per cent of CEOs in the study had disaster exposure but they drove statistically significant changes in firm debt structure, opting for public markets over monitored loans.
CEOs who endured more severe disasters showed the biggest tilt toward public debt.
The effect is said to ve amplified in firms where CEOs already enjoy greater autonomy or face fewer consequences for risk-taking, such as those located near SEC offices, based in states with strong unemployment benefits, governed by co-opted boards, or facing especially restrictive bank loan covenants.
“We’re not saying these CEOs are reckless,” Verousis added. “But boards and investors need to understand where their risk appetite comes from. Childhood trauma can leave a permanent mark, and it shows up in the balance sheet.”
The full paper, How Early Trauma Shapes CEO Risk Appetite for Public Debt Versus Bank Debt, was published in the July 2025 issue of The Financial Review.
Main image: Kampus Production/Pexels
RECENT ARTICLES
-
Deepfake celebrity ads drive new wave of investment scams -
WATCH: Red Bull pilot lands plane on moving freight train in aviation first -
Europe eyes Australia-style social media crackdown for children -
These European hotels have just been named Five-Star in Forbes Travel Guide’s 2026 awards -
McDonald’s Valentine’s ‘McNugget Caviar’ giveaway sells out within minutes -
Europe opens NanoIC pilot line to design the computer chips of the 2030s -
Zanzibar’s tourism boom ‘exposes new investment opportunities beyond hotels’ -
Gen Z set to make up 34% of global workforce by 2034, new report says -
The ideas and discoveries reshaping our future: Science Matters Volume 3, out now -
Lasers finally unlock mystery of Charles Darwin’s specimen jars -
Strong ESG records help firms take R&D global, study finds -
European Commission issues new cancer prevention guidance as EU records 2.7m cases in a year -
Artemis II set to carry astronauts around the Moon for first time in 50 years -
Meet the AI-powered robot that can sort, load and run your laundry on its own -
Wingsuit skydivers blast through world’s tallest hotel at 124mph in Dubai stunt -
Centrum Air to launch first European route with Tashkent–Frankfurt flights -
UK organisations still falling short on GDPR compliance, benchmark report finds -
Stanley Johnson appears on Ugandan national television during visit highlighting wildlife and conservation ties -
Anniversary marks first civilian voyage to Antarctica 60 years ago -
Etihad ranked world’s safest airline for 2026 -
Read it here: Asset Management Matters — new supplement out now -
Breakthroughs that change how we understand health, biology and risk: the new Science Matters supplement is out now -
The new Residence & Citizenship Planning supplement: out now -
Prague named Europe’s top student city in new comparative study -
BGG expands production footprint and backs microalgae as social media drives unprecedented boom in natural wellness

























