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Research Article

The effect of corporate investment on market frictions: implication for the stock price delay premium

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Pages 940-947 | Published online: 13 Dec 2022
 

ABSTRACT

We demonstrate the effect of corporate investment on market frictions by exploring the stock liquidity channel. Using the stock price delay premium as a proxy for market frictions, we find that higher corporate investment leads to lower premium for stocks whose price responds slowly to information. Moreover, this cross-sectional phenomenon is more pronounced during the low sentiment/liquidity period, which experiences lack of liquidity. We obtain qualitatively the same results in a battery of robustness checks. Overall, this study suggests that corporate investment alleviates market frictions by altering stock liquidity.

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Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Notes

1 We exclude the pre-1974 data due to a limited number of observations after filtering.

2 We also perform a variety of robustness tests. The analysis is available upon request.

3 In fact, this is the same result shown in the intersection of Row A-C and Column H-L in because we calculate the risk-adjusted returns based on the Fama and French (Citation1993) three-factor model in .

4 We utilize the time-series analysis based on the portfolio approach, not the cross-sectional regression analysis based on individual variables. Our main variable, PRD, is empirically estimated and, as a result, nosy. This nosiness causes the errors-in-variables problem in the cross-sectional regression.

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