December 1, 2023, 14:00–15:15
Toulouse
Room Auditorium 4
Finance Seminar
Abstract
We investigate whether the quality of investors’ information across horizons influences corporate investment. In our theory, managers under-invest because their stock price imperfectly reflects the value created by their projects. This effect is stronger when there is a mismatch between the horizon of the projects' cash flows and the horizon at which investors obtain information. Using a new hand-collected measure of projects' horizon, we find that improvements in the quality of investors' long-term (short-term) information induce firms with long-term (short-term) projects to invest more, particularly when managers prioritize current stock prices. Hence, the quality of investors’ information across horizons matters.
Keywords
Project Horizon; Short-termism; Information Quality; Forecasting Horizon; Forecasts’ Informativeness; Managerial Incentives;
JEL codes
- D84: Expectations • Speculations
- G14: Information and Market Efficiency • Event Studies • Insider Trading
- G17: Financial Forecasting and Simulation
- M41: Accounting