Explaining Communication Choices during Equity Offerings: Market Timing or Impression Management?
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Handbook of Investor Relations and Financial Communications. gol. / A. Laskin. Wiley, 2017.
Allbwn ymchwil: Pennod mewn Llyfr/Adroddiad/Trafodion Cynhadledd › Pennod › adolygiad gan gymheiriaid
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TY - CHAP
T1 - Explaining Communication Choices during Equity Offerings
T2 - Market Timing or Impression Management?
AU - Hemmings, Danial
AU - Brennan, Niamh M.
AU - Merkl-Davies, Doris M.
PY - 2017/11
Y1 - 2017/11
N2 - Opinions are divided on whether firms use corporate reports (i) to communicate with external parties in a clear and transparent manner (incremental information hypothesis), (ii) to shape messages to suit their own agenda, or, worse still, (iii) to mislead audiences (impression management hypothesis). Two competing hypotheses are considered in this chapter to explain why equity offerings coincide with stock overpricing. The dominant hypothesis to date – the market timing hypothesis – is that managers opportunistically time equity offerings to coincide with high stock prices. Empirical evidence supporting this hypothesis is ambiguous. The impression management hypothesis offers an alternative perspective. In this context, impression management entails the construction of an impression by organizations with the intention of influencing stockholders’ view of the firm as reflected in the stock price. Managers may engage in impression management, using persuasive language in pre-equity offering communications (e.g., narrative disclosures), to drive up the stock price in advance of planned equity offerings.
AB - Opinions are divided on whether firms use corporate reports (i) to communicate with external parties in a clear and transparent manner (incremental information hypothesis), (ii) to shape messages to suit their own agenda, or, worse still, (iii) to mislead audiences (impression management hypothesis). Two competing hypotheses are considered in this chapter to explain why equity offerings coincide with stock overpricing. The dominant hypothesis to date – the market timing hypothesis – is that managers opportunistically time equity offerings to coincide with high stock prices. Empirical evidence supporting this hypothesis is ambiguous. The impression management hypothesis offers an alternative perspective. In this context, impression management entails the construction of an impression by organizations with the intention of influencing stockholders’ view of the firm as reflected in the stock price. Managers may engage in impression management, using persuasive language in pre-equity offering communications (e.g., narrative disclosures), to drive up the stock price in advance of planned equity offerings.
M3 - Chapter
SN - 9781119240785
BT - Handbook of Investor Relations and Financial Communications
A2 - Laskin, A.
PB - Wiley
ER -