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SEC Regulation Fair Disclosure,information, and the cost of capital
Affiliation:1. University of Bristol, United Kingdom;2. University of Stirling, United Kingdom;3. University of Plymouth, United Kingdom;4. Ain Shams University, Egypt;1. Texas A&M University, United States;2. University of California, Davis, United States;1. Accounting and Finance, Tunis Business School (TBS), University of Tunis & LIGUE-ISCAE, University of Manouba, Tunis, Tunisia;2. Accounting and Financial Management, Portsmouth Business School, Portsmouth University, Ruchmond Building, Portland Street, Portsmouth PO1 3DE, United Kingdom
Abstract:Regulation Fair Disclosure (“Reg FD”), adopted by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission in October 2000 was intended to stop the practice of “selective disclosure”, in which companies give material information only to a few analysts and institutional investors prior to disclosing it publicly. Our analysis shows that the adoption of Reg FD caused a significant shift in analyst attention, resulting in a welfare loss for small firms, which now face a higher cost of capital. The loss of the “selective disclosure” channel for information flows could not be compensated for via other information transmission channels. This effect was more pronounced for firms communicating complex information and, consistent with the investor recognition hypothesis, for those losing analyst coverage. Moreover, we find no significant relationship of the different responses with litigation risks and agency costs. Our cross-sectional results suggest that Reg FD had unintended consequences and that “information” in financial markets may be more complicated than current finance theory admits.
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