Keywords

anonymity, crowdsourced, equity research, communication, seeking alpha

Abstract

Crowdsourced financial information platforms often allow content contributors to publish equity research anonymously. This study examines whether investors value or discount information in anonymous equity research. In the short window around research releases, we find that investors’ stock price reaction to anonymous research is muted in comparison to nonanonymous research. Consistent with credibility concerns influencing investor response, we document that this discount to anonymous research dissipates as the monitoring of content contributors intensifies and as authors develop a reputation for high-quality reporting. In addition, we perform a content analysis on the research reports and find that the muted market reaction to anonymous equity research is robust to controlling for textual attributes of information content, further supporting our inference that investors’ are concerned about the credibility of anonymous equity research.

Original Publication Citation

“Anonymous Equity Research” (with Eunjee Kim) Journal of Accounting Research 59, no. 2 (2021): 575-661.

Document Type

Peer-Reviewed Article

Publication Date

2021

Publisher

Journal of Accounting Research

Language

English

College

Marriott School of Business

Department

Accountancy

University Standing at Time of Publication

Associate Professor

Included in

Accounting Commons

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