Publication | Closed Access
Attracting Attention: Cheap Managerial Talk and Costly Market Monitoring
76
Citations
45
References
2008
Year
Securities LawCorporate Risk ManagementMarket AnalysisManagementCostly Market MonitoringDiscretionary DisclosureAgency ConflictsFinancial ManagementInformation AsymmetryMarket BehaviorCorporate GovernanceMarketingFinanceStock DividendsMarket ManipulationAccounting PolicyBusinessFinancial StatementCorporate Finance
ABSTRACT We provide a theory of informal communication—cheap talk—between firms and capital markets that incorporates the role of agency conflicts between managers and shareholders. The analysis suggests that a policy of discretionary disclosure that encourages managers to attract the market's attention when the firm is substantially undervalued can create shareholder value. The theory also relates the credibility of managerial announcements to the use of stock‐based compensation, the presence of informed trading, and the liquidity of the stock. Our results are consistent with the existence of positive announcement effects produced by apparently innocuous corporate events (e.g., stock dividends, name changes).
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