Published2021 Journal of Financial Economics

Listening in on investors' thoughts and conversations

Authors: Chen, Hwang

Abstract

A large literature in neuroscience and social psychology shows that humans are wired to be meticulous about how they are perceived by others. In this paper, we propose that impression management considerations can also end up guiding the content that investors transmit via word of mouth and inadvertently lead to the propagation of noise. We analyze server log data from one of the largest investment-related websites in the United States. Consistent with our proposition, we find that investors more frequently share articles that are more suitable for impression management despite such articles less accurately predicting returns. Additional analyses suggest that high levels of sharing can lead to overpricing.

Keywords

Social interactionsSocial transmission biasAsset prices

Tags of Social Finance

#Media and Textual Analysis#Archival Empirical#Financing- and Investment Decisions (Individual)#Social Transmission Biases#Experimental & Survey-Based Empirical#Asset Pricing & Trading Volume and Market Efficiency#Propagation of Noise & Undesirable Outcomes