Firm opacity and financial market information asymmetry

2014 ◽  
Vol 25 ◽  
pp. 83-94 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rahul Ravi ◽  
Youna Hong
2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 329
Author(s):  
Fujun Lai ◽  
Qian Wang ◽  
Qingxiang Feng

There have been many research studies that have examined the impact of financial development on economic growth, but few of them have explored this problem from the perspective of financial market information. In this paper, we investigate whether the stock price informativeness affect the listed firms’ sustainable growth by using the Chinese manufacturing listed companies’ data from 2007 to 2017. Specifically, we use the stock price nonsynchronicity and turnover rate to measure stock price informativeness, and the economic growth sustainability is proxied by the listed companies’ total factor productivity, which is the driving force of firms’ sustainable and steady growth. We find that higher stock price informativeness is associated with higher total factor productivity, no matter whether the stock price informativeness is proxied by the stock price nonsynchronicity or turnover rate. This finding is robust when we mitigate for endogeneity issues, and when we use the return on assets (ROA) as an alternative proxy for economic growth. Our results show that the stock price informativeness can significantly improve the total factor productivity of the listed companies, and play an important role in the sustainable development of listed manufacturing enterprises.


Author(s):  
V. Milovidov

Sustainable state of information asymmetry at the financial market pushes its players to impetuous race for knowledge and awareness, to overcoming the risks and uncertainties of investment transactions. One has to run in order to just remain at the same place. In other words, asymmetry of information keeps the financial market in good fit. The stronger is this state the less is the market actors’ confidence that information component of their motivations is sufficient for taking decisions. Thus, steadily growing aspiration for finding the necessary means capable to level off the asymmetry of information and to secure reduction of risks.


Author(s):  
Lantian Liang ◽  
Ryan Williams ◽  
Steven Chong Xiao

Abstract We investigate whether suppliers adjust innovative supply chain investment following stock market signals about customers’ economic prospects. We show that suppliers increase R&D and investment in customer-related patents after positive market reactions to customers’ new product announcements. A battery of falsification tests suggest that spurious factors are unlikely to explain our results. Market signals about customers appear more important when information asymmetry is greater, when suppliers face greater competitive threats, and when suppliers are financially unconstrained. Our evidence suggests that the stock market can be a viable source of information to mitigate supply chain frictions.


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