This study documents a puzzling historical trend in crash risk for US-listed firms: between 1950 and 2019, the firm-year occurrences of idiosyncratic stock price crashes rose from 5.5% to an astonishing 27%. The vastness of the literature notoriously attributes crashes to agency reasons, i.e., self-interested executives who strategically camouflage bad news via the financial reporting opacity and overinvestment channels. Nonetheless, we document that the opacity- and overinvestment-crash relations are nonsignificant, especially in the period following the enforcement of the Sarbanes–Oxley Act. The statistically nonsignificant relations are also witnessed in tests that account for the effect of equity-based compensation incentives and ...
We survey the burgeoning literature on the determinants and consequences of firm‐specific future sto...
We examine the relation between operating cash flow (OCF) opacity and stock price crash risk. We fin...
We survey the burgeoning literature on the determinants and consequences of firm‐specific future sto...
This study documents a puzzling historical trend in crash risk for US‐listed firms: between 1950 and...
This paper explores the puzzling trend observed in US-listed firms between 1950 and 2018; specifical...
Abstract: Equity is overvalued when its market value is far above its underlying value. Jensen (2005...
This study uses 462,678 monthly observations of US-listed firms for the period 1990–2018 to document...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to empirically analyze whether and how managerial overconfiden...
Recent studies suggest that greater exposure to the market for corporate control matters for manager...
Recent studies suggest that greater exposure to the market for corporate control matters for manager...
Recent studies suggest that greater exposure to the market for corporate control matters for manager...
Purpose: Whether financial analysts play an effective role as information intermediaries and monitor...
We investigate whether ownership structure, accounting opacity, board structure & processes and mana...
This paper examines empirically the effect of firm-level business strategies on future stock price c...
We survey the burgeoning literature on the determinants and consequences of firm-specific future sto...
We survey the burgeoning literature on the determinants and consequences of firm‐specific future sto...
We examine the relation between operating cash flow (OCF) opacity and stock price crash risk. We fin...
We survey the burgeoning literature on the determinants and consequences of firm‐specific future sto...
This study documents a puzzling historical trend in crash risk for US‐listed firms: between 1950 and...
This paper explores the puzzling trend observed in US-listed firms between 1950 and 2018; specifical...
Abstract: Equity is overvalued when its market value is far above its underlying value. Jensen (2005...
This study uses 462,678 monthly observations of US-listed firms for the period 1990–2018 to document...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to empirically analyze whether and how managerial overconfiden...
Recent studies suggest that greater exposure to the market for corporate control matters for manager...
Recent studies suggest that greater exposure to the market for corporate control matters for manager...
Recent studies suggest that greater exposure to the market for corporate control matters for manager...
Purpose: Whether financial analysts play an effective role as information intermediaries and monitor...
We investigate whether ownership structure, accounting opacity, board structure & processes and mana...
This paper examines empirically the effect of firm-level business strategies on future stock price c...
We survey the burgeoning literature on the determinants and consequences of firm-specific future sto...
We survey the burgeoning literature on the determinants and consequences of firm‐specific future sto...
We examine the relation between operating cash flow (OCF) opacity and stock price crash risk. We fin...
We survey the burgeoning literature on the determinants and consequences of firm‐specific future sto...