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![]() The Journal of FinanceVolume 54 Issue 1, Pages 237 - 268 Published Online: 6 May 2003 © 2010 the American Finance Association
Abstract | Full Text: PDF (Size: 172K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking Herding among Investment Newsletters: Theory and Evidence Copyright The American Finance Association 1999 ABSTRACTA model is developed which implies that if an analyst has high reputation or low ability, or if there is strong public information that is inconsistent with the analyst's private information, she is likely to herd. Herding is also common when informative private signals are positively correlated across analysts. The model is tested using data from analysts who publish investment newsletters. Consistent with the model's implications, the empirical results indicate that a newsletter analyst is likely to herd on Value Line's recommendation if her reputation is high, if her ability is low, or if signal correlation is high. |
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Conference and Special Issue on Corporate Governance and the Global Financial Crisis
24-25 September 2010 in Philadelphia, USA
Deadline for Conference Proposals: 1 March 2010
Deadline for Special Issue Papers: 1 August 2010
Special Issue on Private Equity, LBOs, and Corporate Governance: International Evidence
Submission deadline: 1 March 2010
Guest edited by Igor Filatotchev, Donald Siegel and Mike Wright
