TitleCan Inquiry Letters Make R&D Information Pricing More Effective? Evidence from China
AuthorsYu, Yan
Lee, Yi-Tsung
AffiliationBeijing Technol & Business Univ, Business Sch, Dept Finance, 11-33 Fucheng Rd, Beijing 100048, Peoples R China
Peking Univ, Guanghua Sch Management, Dept Accounting, Beijing, Peoples R China
KeywordsCOMPANY RESPONSES
SEC
CAPITALIZATION
DISCLOSURE
INVESTMENT
INNOVATION
SENTIMENT
Issue DateApr-2023
PublisherEMERGING MARKETS FINANCE AND TRADE
AbstractThere are information transfer motives and earnings management motives for the disclosure of R&D expense information. These two motives contradict each other, which can cause distortion of corporate R&D expense information and lead to mispricing of R&D information. In this paper, we investigate the market reaction to R&D expense inquiry letters (hereafter, RDILs) and their impact mechanism from the perspective of correcting R&D information mispricing by using Chinese A-share listed companies from 2015 to 2019. We find that RDILs have a significantly negative market reaction, suggesting that they have additional information content. Mechanism analyses indicate that this information content is affected by the inquiry letter characteristics and the R&D characteristics of the inquired firm. The findings of this paper have implications for how developing countries can use capital markets to stimulate corporate innovation, and for the establishment of proactive inquiry mechanisms to address the mispricing of innovation information. Exchanges in other countries should consider their use.
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11897/675003
ISSN1540-496X
DOI10.1080/1540496X.2023.2190848
IndexedSSCI
Appears in Collections:光华管理学院

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