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Does media coverage deter firms from withholding bad news? Evidence from stock price crash risk

journal contribution
posted on 2020-10-01, 00:00 authored by Zhe An, Chen Chen, Vic Naiker, Jun Wang
Spurred by the informational and disciplinary roles that the media fulfils, this study provides initial evidence on how higher media coverage is associated with a lower tendency of firms withholding bad news, proxied by stock price crash risk. Our main findings are robust to a battery of tests that account for endogeneity concerns including a difference-in-differences analysis based on newspaper closures that exogenously reduce media coverage and a regression-discontinuity design analysis based on the top band of Russell 2000 and lower band of Russell 1000 index stocks. Additional tests reveal that the negative relation between media coverage and stock price crash risk is concentrated within firms with more negative and novel news coverage and firms with higher litigation or reputation risks. We also find that media plays an important role in reducing future stock price crash risk when there is reduced monitoring by other external monitoring mechanisms such as external auditors, financial analysts, and institutional shareholders.

History

Journal

Journal of Corporate Finance

Volume

64

Article number

101664

Pagination

101664-101664

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

ISSN

0929-1199

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal, C Journal article

Copyright notice

2020, Elsevier

Publisher

Elsevier