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Beauty premium? Evidence from institutional investors’ voting for all-star analysts

dc.contributor.authorLi, Congcong
dc.contributor.authorLin, An-Ping
dc.contributor.authorLu, Hai
dc.contributor.authorVeenstra, Kevin
dc.contributor.authorMichael Lee-Chin & Family Institute for Strategic Business Studies
dc.contributor.departmentNoneen_US
dc.date.accessioned2018-01-19T17:09:53Z
dc.date.available2018-01-19T17:09:53Z
dc.date.issued2017-09
dc.description33 p. ; Includes bibliographical references (pp. 23-25). ; "September 4, 2017". The authors "gratefully acknowledge helpful comments from Mark Bradshaw, Xia Chen, Richard Crowley, Peter Joos, Siew Hong Teoh, Holly Yang, and workshop participants at Singapore Management University. We also thank PhD students Chao Dou, Yuanyuan Liu, and Meng Luck Tay for their excellent research assistance in data collection. We thank McMaster University, Singapore Management University, and Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada for their financial support."en_US
dc.description.abstractThis study examines whether institutional investors’ voting for All-Star financial analysts is affected by analyst beauty. Using a sample of 1,135 U.S. analysts and controlling for analyst performance, we document that beauty, on average, does not affect the outcome of All-Star analyst voting. However, a beauty premium emerges in those sectors where there is high information asymmetry on analyst performance between analysts and fund managers. We further find that good-looking female U.S. analysts are less likely to be voted All-Star analysts. Our evidence implies that the beauty premium can be mitigated by a strong economic force such as low information asymmetry. Valuation Insight: A bias towards beauty suggests suboptimal human resource allocation that may negatively impact firm value. Concentrating on financial analysts this paper finds that a beauty premium exists in that good-looking male analysts are more likely to be voted All-Star (these are paid more and their advice is presumably more likely to be followed). However, the premium disappears for sectors with low information asymmetry between fund managers and analysts (in sectors with more and more experienced analysts generating lower forecast dispersion).en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11375/22515
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.relation.ispartofseriesMichael Lee-Chin & Family Institute for Strategic Business Studies Working Paper ; 2017-06
dc.subjectAnalystsen_US
dc.subjectBeautyen_US
dc.subjectInformation asymmetryen_US
dc.subjectLabour marketen_US
dc.titleBeauty premium? Evidence from institutional investors’ voting for all-star analystsen_US
dc.typeWorking Paperen_US

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