The Stock Market and Corporate Investment: A Test of Catering Theory
London School of Economics and Political Science · Northwestern University
Abstract
We test a catering theory describing how stock market mispricing might influence individual firms' investment decisions. We use discretionary accruals as our proxy for mispricing. We find a positive relation between abnormal investment and discretionary accruals; that abnormal investment is more sensitive to discretionary accruals for firms with higher R&D intensity (opaque firms) or share turnover (firms with shorter shareholder horizons); that firms with high abnormal investment subsequently have low stock returns; and that the larger the relative price premium, the stronger the abnormal return predictability. We show that patterns in abnormal returns are stronger for firms with higher R&D intensity or share…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 42.09
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 80
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- POLK
- Stock market
- Stock (firearms)
- Test (biology)
- Economics
- Financial economics
- Business
- Management