Asymmetric information and R&D disclosure: Evidence from scientific publications
Keywords: 
Financial analysts
Information asymmetry
Investor attention
R&D disclosure
Scientific publications
Issue Date: 
23-Mar-2024
Publisher: 
Informs
ISSN: 
1526-5501
Note: 
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial- NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Citation: 
Stefano Baruffaldi, Markus Simeth, David Wehrheim (2024) Asymmetric Information and R&D Disclosure: Evidence from Scientific Publications. Management Science 70(2):1052-1069. https://doi.org/10.1287/mnsc.2023.4721
Abstract
We examine how asymmetric information in financial markets affects voluntary research and development (R&D) disclosure, considering scientific publications as a disclosure channel. Difference-in-differences regressions around brokerage house mergers and closures, which increase information asymmetry through reductions in analyst coverage, indicate a quick and sustained increase in scientific publications from treated firms relative to the number of publications from control firms. The treatment effects are concentrated among firms with higher information asymmetry and lower investor demand, firms with greater financial constraints, and firms with lower proprietary costs. We do not find evidence of changes in financial disclosure, nor do we find changes in patenting. Results from ordinary least squares regressions show that scientific publications by firms are positively associated with investor attention toward those firms. We complement these results with qualitative evidence from conference calls. Our results highlight the limitations and trade-offs R&D firms face in their financial market disclosure policies.
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