The Informational Role of Corporate Hedging
Research output: Journal Publications and Reviews › RGC 21 - Publication in refereed journal › peer-review
Author(s)
Detail(s)
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 3843–3867 |
Journal / Publication | Management Science |
Volume | 64 |
Issue number | 8 |
Online published | 15 May 2017 |
Publication status | Published - Aug 2018 |
Externally published | Yes |
Link(s)
Abstract
We study the informational role of corporate hedging, comparing two hypotheses. Under the “opacity” hypothesis, corporate hedging makes earnings less informative, renders the firm opaque, and increases informed traders’ profitability. Under the
“transparency” hypothesis, hedging reduces uncertainty and erodes the informed traders’
information advantage and profitability. Our tests support the transparency hypothesis.
Hedging is associated with lower uncertainty (lower implied volatility and analyst forecast
dispersion, and greater breadth of ownership). It is also associated with a lower informed
trading intensity, in particular for short selling. Short selling profits are more than twice
lower on the stocks of firms engaging in corporate hedging.
Research Area(s)
- corporate hedging, informed trading, uncertainty, short selling
Citation Format(s)
The Informational Role of Corporate Hedging. / Manconi, Alberto; Massa, Massimo; Zhang, Lei.
In: Management Science, Vol. 64, No. 8, 08.2018, p. 3843–3867.
In: Management Science, Vol. 64, No. 8, 08.2018, p. 3843–3867.
Research output: Journal Publications and Reviews › RGC 21 - Publication in refereed journal › peer-review