Investors perceive stocks of companies with fluent names as more profitable. This perception may result from two different channels: a direct, non-deliberate affect toward fluent names or a deliberate interpretation of fluent names as a signal for company quality. We use preregistered experiments to disentangle these channels and test their limitations. Our results indicate the existence of a significant non-deliberate fluency effect, while the deliberate fluency effect can be activated and deactivated in boundary cases. Both effects are consistent across different groups of participants. However, whereas the fluency effect is strong in isolation, it has limitations when investors are confronted with additional information about the stock
Previous research reported that a portfolio of stocks with clever ticker symbols outperformed the ov...
This paper investigates the impact of corporate name changes on both of stock performance and analys...
When people make judgments about the truth of a claim, related but nonprobative information rapidly ...
Previous research shows that stocks with fluent names trade at higher prices. In this paper, we test...
Recent research shows that stocks with fluent names trade at higher prices, but it is not clear whet...
I use a survey methodology to obtain consensus ratings of 64 Swiss company names. The survey evidenc...
A well-chosen corporate name communicates much information and emotion to a firm’s publics. Despite...
Purpose of study The undeniably common and seemingly harmless convention of alphabetization app...
Fluency is the experienced ease of ongoing mental operations, which increases the subjective positiv...
98 p.In this study, I provide experimental evidence on how familiarity with the analyst's name (indu...
Prior research has demonstrated that high processing fluency influences a wide range of evaluations ...
Unscrambling an anagram prior to making a recognition judgement about that target word or an unrelat...
Recent studies document that market participants react positively to the positive language sentiment...
Managers can describe their firms using label nouns (e.g., “our company is a provider of personalize...
Extensive research has revealed that the convention of alphabetical name ordering tends to provide a...
Previous research reported that a portfolio of stocks with clever ticker symbols outperformed the ov...
This paper investigates the impact of corporate name changes on both of stock performance and analys...
When people make judgments about the truth of a claim, related but nonprobative information rapidly ...
Previous research shows that stocks with fluent names trade at higher prices. In this paper, we test...
Recent research shows that stocks with fluent names trade at higher prices, but it is not clear whet...
I use a survey methodology to obtain consensus ratings of 64 Swiss company names. The survey evidenc...
A well-chosen corporate name communicates much information and emotion to a firm’s publics. Despite...
Purpose of study The undeniably common and seemingly harmless convention of alphabetization app...
Fluency is the experienced ease of ongoing mental operations, which increases the subjective positiv...
98 p.In this study, I provide experimental evidence on how familiarity with the analyst's name (indu...
Prior research has demonstrated that high processing fluency influences a wide range of evaluations ...
Unscrambling an anagram prior to making a recognition judgement about that target word or an unrelat...
Recent studies document that market participants react positively to the positive language sentiment...
Managers can describe their firms using label nouns (e.g., “our company is a provider of personalize...
Extensive research has revealed that the convention of alphabetical name ordering tends to provide a...
Previous research reported that a portfolio of stocks with clever ticker symbols outperformed the ov...
This paper investigates the impact of corporate name changes on both of stock performance and analys...
When people make judgments about the truth of a claim, related but nonprobative information rapidly ...