Corporate transparency and the disposition effect
Siliu Chen, Fei Ren

TL;DR
This study finds that higher corporate transparency significantly reduces the disposition effect by influencing investor confidence and holding behaviors for profitable and losing stocks.
Contribution
It demonstrates that increased corporate transparency can mitigate the disposition effect among investors by affecting their confidence in holding stocks.
Findings
Higher transparency reduces the disposition effect.
Investors' confidence increases for profitable stocks with more transparency.
Transparency's impact on holding losing stocks is less pronounced.
Abstract
The disposition effect describes investors' irrational behavior of selling profitable assets too soon while holding onto losing assets for too long. This study examines the impact of transparency at the firm level on the disposition effect of individual investors who hold that company's stock. Our results show that an increase in corporate transparency significantly reduces the disposition effect. Further analysis reveals that for companies with greater transparency, when the held stock is profitable, investors' confidence in holding it increases, leading to a reduced bias toward selling profitable stocks. When the stock is held at a loss, investors' confidence in holding it weakens, but they often perceive the loss as temporary and maintain confidence in the company's long-term prospects, thus exacerbating the bias toward holding losing stocks. The effect of increased transparency on…
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