Publication | Open Access
The source of information in prices and investment-price sensitivity
277
Citations
37
References
2017
Year
Total InformationLawInvestment-price SensitivityMarket MicrostructureSecurities LawAsset PricingSearch CostsEconomic AnalysisEconomicsPrice FormationAccountingStaggered EnforcementInformation AsymmetryFinancePrice EfficiencyFinancial EconomicsInformation EconomicsBusinessCorporate FinanceEconomics Of Information
This paper shows that real decisions depend not only on the total amount of information in prices, but the source of this information—a manager learns from prices when they contain information not possessed by him. We use the staggered enforcement of insider trading laws across 27 countries as a shock to the source of information that leaves total information unchanged: enforcement reduces (increases) managers’ (outsiders’) contribution to the stock price. Consistent with the predictions of our theoretical model, enforcement increases investment-q sensitivity, even when controlling for total price informativeness. The effect is larger in industries where learning is likely to be stronger, and in emerging countries where outsider information acquisition rises most post-enforcement. Enforcement does not increase the sensitivity of investment to cash flow, a non-price measure of investment opportunities. These findings suggest that extant measures of price efficiency should be rethought when evaluating real efficiency. More broadly, our paper provides causal evidence that managers learn from prices, by using a shock to price informativeness.
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