articleThe Journal of FinanceJul 22, 2004BRONZE OA

Information and the Cost of Capital

University of Denver · Cornell University · +2 more institutions

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Abstract

ABSTRACT We investigate the role of information in affecting a firm's cost of capital. We show that differences in the composition of information between public and private information affect the cost of capital, with investors demanding a higher return to hold stocks with greater private information. This higher return arises because informed investors are better able to shift their portfolio to incorporate new information, and uninformed investors are thus disadvantaged. In equilibrium, the quantity and quality of information affect asset prices. We show firms can influence their cost of capital by choosing features like accounting treatments, analyst coverage, and market microstructure.

Citation impact

3,098
total citations
FWCI
94.47
Percentile
100%
References
35
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Cost of capital
  • Affect (linguistics)
  • Business
  • Private information retrieval
  • Portfolio
  • Disadvantaged
  • Information quality
  • Asset (computer security)
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