A strategic issue facing marketing managers is ‘how much and when’ to spend on advertising. We argue that investor sentiment in the stock market may influence advertising expenditure by affecting firms' ability to raise new funds. We show that during periods of low (high) investor sentiment, firms decrease (increase) their advertising expenditure, even though the effectiveness of advertising is greater (lower) during such periods. We also find that these results are stronger for financially constrained firms that rely more on external financing. Our findings suggest that marketing managers can improve the efficiency of their advertising expenditure by raising (reducing) it during periods of low (high) sentiment.
History
Journal
International journal of research in marketing
Volume
35
Pagination
611-627
Location
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
ISSN
0167-8116
Language
eng
Publication classification
C Journal article, C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal