2018 - Franco Angeli
Article
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Do letters to shareholders inform or mislead? : insights from insider trading
73-109 p.
- Empirical studies consistently provide evidence that investors perceive qualitative disclosures as useful because they have significant effects on analysts' forecast revisions and a firm's share price. But these results leave unanswered the question of whether managers write qualitative disclosures to inform or mislead investors. Based on the signaling theory, we consider two actions by the same manager: one (insider trading) is a costly signal whilst the other (qualitative disclosure) is the cheap signal. We then verify whether they are coherent. We investigate the content and the verbal tone of the Letter of Shareholders and the insider trading from its author before and after the letter's date of release and find that the costly signal (the insider trading) is not coherent with the cheap signal (the disclosure). This finding indicates that managers do not use qualitative disclosures to offer incremental information but that they might use them to mislead investors. [Publishers' text].
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Information
ISSN: 2036-6779
KEYWORDS
- Signaling theory, impression management, insider trading, letter to shareholder, verbal tone
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In this issue
- Greetings from the editor : ten years of personal engagement in Financial Reporting
- The value relevance of the fair value hierarchy : empirical evidence from the European Union
- Determining characteristics of boards adopting Integrated Reporting
- Do letters to shareholders inform or mislead? : insights from insider trading
- The role of institutions in the process of global convergence to IFRS
- Book Review