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We study the idea that seemingly unrelated behavioral biases can coevolve if they jointly compensate for the errors that any one of them would give rise to in isolation. We suggest that the "endowment effect" and the "winner's curse" could have jointly survived natural selection together. We...
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I analyze a dynamic model of over-the-counter asset sales in which a manager receives stock-sensitive compensation and a transaction conveys information about the firm's value. I examine how market response to an asset sale feeds back to the manager's decision on the timing and the price of the...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10012904714
We analyze a model in which information may be voluntarily disclosed by a firm and/or by a third party, e.g., financial analysts. Due to its strategic nature, corporate voluntary disclosure is qualitatively different from third-party disclosure. Greater analyst coverage crowds out (crowds in)...
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Credit-rating agencies have an incentive to maintain a public reputation for credibility among investors but also have an incentive to develop a second, private reputation for leniency among issuers. We show that in markets with few issuers, such as markets for structured assets, these...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10013036167
We study the idea that seemingly unrelated behavioral biases can coevolve if they jointly compensate for the errors that any one of them would give rise to in isolation. We suggest that the "endowment effect" and the "winner's curse" could have jointly survived natural selection together. We...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011661133