Recent work documents a behavioral tendency of investors to expect excessively high upside potential for low-priced stocks. These expectations expose low-priced firms to greater pressure for short-term performance because their poor earnings news leads to greater investor disappointment and larger stock price declines. Therefore, we hypothesize that firms with a long-term focus, such as those that invest heavily in research and development (R&D), avoid low share prices. Consistent with our hypothesis, we find that firms with higher R&D capital decide on a higher filing price in their initial public offering, are less likely to undergo a stock split once listed, and upon a stock split, choose a higher post-split price. We establish a causal ...
We test a catering theory describing how stockmarketmispricingmight influence individual firms ’ inv...
This paper examines the stock market reaction to research and development (R&D) announcements ma...
Mimeo, 2009This paper looks at the effect of shareholder horizon on corporate behavior. In perfect c...
We investigate whether short-termism distorts the investment decisions of stock market listed firms....
This study investigates whether firm’s management uses split ratios to target low price anchors in o...
The rise in quarterly capitalism in corporate America—increased pressure to meet quarterly earnings ...
Building on the catering hypothesis and institutional investor preference literature, we propose a g...
We examine a sample of 8,313 cases, between 1951 and 2001, where firms unexpectedly increase their r...
This paper shows that short-term stock price concerns induce CEOs to take value-reducing actions. Ve...
Reports indicate that capital markets frequently focus on short-term corporate financial performance...
In this study, we argue that share price reaction to a firm’s capital expenditure deci-sions depends...
Prior research shows returns are positive when firms meet or beat analysts’ consensus forecasts b...
While many studies report that R&D investments significantly contribute to firm value, little existi...
We develop and test a catering theory of nominal stock prices. The theory predicts that managers set...
Focusing on high-technology issuers, this study provides new evidence that managers strategically ov...
We test a catering theory describing how stockmarketmispricingmight influence individual firms ’ inv...
This paper examines the stock market reaction to research and development (R&D) announcements ma...
Mimeo, 2009This paper looks at the effect of shareholder horizon on corporate behavior. In perfect c...
We investigate whether short-termism distorts the investment decisions of stock market listed firms....
This study investigates whether firm’s management uses split ratios to target low price anchors in o...
The rise in quarterly capitalism in corporate America—increased pressure to meet quarterly earnings ...
Building on the catering hypothesis and institutional investor preference literature, we propose a g...
We examine a sample of 8,313 cases, between 1951 and 2001, where firms unexpectedly increase their r...
This paper shows that short-term stock price concerns induce CEOs to take value-reducing actions. Ve...
Reports indicate that capital markets frequently focus on short-term corporate financial performance...
In this study, we argue that share price reaction to a firm’s capital expenditure deci-sions depends...
Prior research shows returns are positive when firms meet or beat analysts’ consensus forecasts b...
While many studies report that R&D investments significantly contribute to firm value, little existi...
We develop and test a catering theory of nominal stock prices. The theory predicts that managers set...
Focusing on high-technology issuers, this study provides new evidence that managers strategically ov...
We test a catering theory describing how stockmarketmispricingmight influence individual firms ’ inv...
This paper examines the stock market reaction to research and development (R&D) announcements ma...
Mimeo, 2009This paper looks at the effect of shareholder horizon on corporate behavior. In perfect c...