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Financial Analysis on Social Media and Disclosure Processing Costs: Evidence from Seeking Alpha

E. Gómez, Frank Heflin, James Moon, J. Donald WarrenAccounting财务报告UTD24
The Accounting Review2024-05-30Temple University; Temple College; Georgia Institute of Technology; Texas A&M University; Mitchell InstituteDOI
Citations23

ABSTRACT Less-informed investors face greater costs of processing earnings news into actionable information. Our findings suggest financial analysis on social media reduces less-informed investors’ disclosure processing costs. We document an attenuated spike in earnings announcement (EA) information asymmetry for quarters containing more financial analysis on social media in the weeks prior to the EA. Cross-sectional evidence suggests this finding is stronger when coverage from traditional intermediaries is lower, for financial analyses written by more credible authors, and for financial analyses that are more likely relevant to evaluating the EA. Further evidence suggests retail trades, but not institutional trades, at EAs are significantly more profitable in quarters with greater financial analysis on social media, consistent with financial analysis on social media benefitting traders who are otherwise less-informed. Overall, our evidence suggests that financial analysis on social media plays an important role in aiding less-informed investors by helping them better process EA news. JEL Classifications: G14; M41.

EarningsSocial mediaIntermediaryBusinessFinancial intermediaryInformation asymmetryFinanceAccountingEconomicsAdvertisingPolitical scienceFinancial Markets and Investment Strategies