Strategic Information Revelation and Capital Allocation

It is commonly believed that stock prices help firms' managers make more efficient real investment decisions, because they aggregate information about fundamentals that is not otherwise known to managers. This paper identifies a limitation to this view. It shows that if informed traders internalize that firms use prices as a signal, stock price informativeness depends on the quality of managers' prior information. In particular, managers with low quality information would like to learn about their own fundamentals by relying on the information aggregated in the stock price. However, in this case, the profitability of trading falls for informed speculators, who therefore reduce their trading volume, reducing the informativeness of prices. As a result, stock prices are not as useful in guiding capital toward its most productive use, leading to inefficient investment decisions. Using a sample of U.S. publicly traded companies between 1990 and 2010, the paper documents a positive correlation between the quality of managerial information and stock price informativeness. Contrary to the conventional view that less informed managers should rely more on stock prices when making investment decisions, the author finds no differences in the sensitivity of investment to stock prices for different levels of managerial information. The evidence suggests that while firms do learn from prices, the learning channel and its effects on real investment are limited.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Pedraza Morales, Alvaro
Format: Policy Research Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank Group, Washington, DC 2014-07
Subjects:ACCESS TO FINANCING, ACCOUNTING, AFFILIATED ORGANIZATIONS, AGENCY PROBLEM, AMORTIZATION, ARBITRAGE, ASSET PRICE, ASSET PRICES, ASSETS RATIO, ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION, BENCHMARK, BOND, BOOK VALUE, BOOK VALUES, BROKERS, BUDGETING, CAPITAL ALLOCATION, CASH FLOWS, CORPORATE BOND, CORPORATE INSIDERS, CORPORATE INVESTMENT, CREDIT RATING, CREDIT SPREADS, DEMAND FUNCTION, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, DISCLOSURE, ECONOMIES OF SCALE, ELASTICITY, ELASTICITY OF SUPPLY, EMERGING MARKETS, EQUILIBRIUM, EQUILIBRIUM PRICE, EQUITY INVESTORS, EXOGENOUS SUPPLY, EXPECTED VALUE, EXPENDITURES, FAIR, FEDERAL RESERVE, FEDERAL RESERVE BANK, FINANCIAL MARKETS, FINANCIAL STUDIES, FINANCIAL SYSTEMS, FIXED ASSETS, FIXED INVESTMENT, FORECASTS, FUNCTIONAL FORMS, FUTURE CASH FLOW, FUTURE EARNINGS, GDP, IMPERFECT COMPETITION, INCOME, INDIVIDUAL FIRMS, INDIVIDUAL INVESTORS, INFLATION, INFORMED TRADER, INFORMED TRADERS, INSIDER TRADING, INSTITUTIONAL INVESTORS, INTEREST RATES, INTERNATIONAL BANK, INTERNATIONAL SETTLEMENTS, INVESTING, INVESTMENT CHOICE, INVESTMENT DECISION, INVESTMENT DECISIONS, INVESTMENT OPPORTUNITY, INVESTMENT PROJECTS, INVESTMENT RATE, INVESTMENT RETURN, INVESTMENT STRATEGY, IPO, LIQUIDITY, MACROECONOMIC VARIABLES, MARKET COMPETITION, MARKET DATA, MARKET EFFICIENCY, MARKET INDEX, MARKET INFORMATION, MARKET PARTICIPANT, MARKET PARTICIPANTS, MARKET POWER, MARKET PRICES, MARKET STOCK, MARKET VALUE, NASH EQUILIBRIUM, NEW PRODUCTS, NPV, OPEN MARKET, OPTIMAL INVESTMENT, OPTIMIZATION, OUTPUT, PERFECT INFORMATION, POLITICAL ECONOMY, PRICE ADJUSTMENT, PRICE EFFECT, PRICE MOVEMENTS, PRIVATE EQUITY, PRIVATE EQUITY INVESTOR, PRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENT, PRODUCT MARKET, PROFIT MAXIMIZATION, PROFIT MAXIMIZING, PROFITABILITY, PUBLIC EQUITY, REGULATORS, RETURN, RETURNS, RISK NEUTRAL, SALES, SECONDARY MARKET, SECONDARY MARKETS, SECURITIES, SECURITIES MARKET, SHARE PRICE, SHARE PRICES, SHARES OUTSTANDING, SHORT SELLING, SPECULATOR, SPECULATORS, SPREAD, STOCK MARKET, STOCK MARKETS, STOCK PRICE, STOCK PRICES, STOCK RETURN, STOCK RETURNS, STOCKS, SUPPLY CURVE, SUPPLY SHOCK, SYNCHRONOUS STOCK PRICE MOVEMENTS, TRADES, TRADING ACTIVITY, TRADING COST, TRADING COSTS, TRADING VOLUME, UNEMPLOYMENT, UNINFORMED TRADERS, VALUATION, VALUATIONS, VALUE OF ASSETS, VOLATILITY,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/07/19902948/strategic-information-revelation-capital-allocation
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19380
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!