Does the economic value of new product announcements depend upon preannouncement signals? An empirical test of information asymmetry theories

D. Mishra, M. D. Dalman
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Abstract

Purpose Signals, e.g. information released by firms about new products attract the attention and scrutiny of customers, competitors and other stakeholders. In product management, an important area of research focuses on the economic value of such signals. However, extant studies consider valuation effects of product signals independently, and largely ignore how the value of a product signal at launch depends upon prior preannouncements. This study aims to investigate how the dependence of new product development (NPD) signals on past preannouncements affects firms’ security prices. Design/methodology/approach The study develops a conceptual model that draws upon information asymmetry theories, i.e. signaling and agency theory to hypothesize the effect of firms’ product introduction announcements on security prices given two antecedent preannouncement types (costless and costly signals). Hypotheses are tested by conducting an event study analysis on a sample of 149 matched observations (product introduction announcement preceded by a certain type of preannouncement). Findings Empirical results confirm the hypothesis that positive valuation effects are observed during product launch that is preceded by initial costless product signaling. In contrast, for ex ante costly product signaling, launch events are not diagnostic enough to affect value. Since organizations’ NPD communications can revise investors’ prior beliefs, they need to be understood in more detail and managed strategically. Research limitations/implications Valuation metrics can be noisy with a potential to influence information events. In addition, product introduction signals may be deployed more frequently in certain fast-paced industries, e.g. hi-tech. Practical implications Managers can incorporate signal dependence in product communications. For example, in costless ex ante product signaling situations, initial economic loss may be recovered through launch announcements. Furthermore, when costly signals have been used earlier, firms may economize on promotion costs during launch. Originality/value Past research has focused on assessing the economic value of new product signals independently, i.e. as discrete events. Absent is an examination of valuation effects due to the dependence of launch signals on prior preannouncements. This paper addresses the dependence gap, and empirical results show that even if firms do not deploy product signals ex ante, value can be created through ex post launch announcements.
新产品发布的经济价值是否取决于预先发布的信号?信息不对称理论的实证检验
信号,如公司发布的关于新产品的信息,吸引顾客、竞争对手和其他利益相关者的注意和审查。在产品管理中,研究这些信号的经济价值是一个重要的领域。然而,现有的研究都是独立考虑产品信号的估值效应,很大程度上忽略了产品信号在上市时的价值如何取决于事先的预先公告。本研究旨在探讨新产品开发(NPD)讯号对过去预先公告的依赖性如何影响企业的证券价格。本研究发展了一个概念模型,利用信息不对称理论,即信号和代理理论,假设在两种预先公告类型(无成本和昂贵信号)的情况下,公司的产品引入公告对证券价格的影响。通过对149个匹配观察(产品介绍公告之前有某种类型的预告)的样本进行事件研究分析来检验假设。实证结果证实了这一假设,即在初始无成本产品信号之前的产品发布期间观察到积极的估值效应。相比之下,对于事前昂贵的产品信号,发布事件的诊断性不足以影响价值。由于组织的新产品开发沟通可以改变投资者先前的信念,因此需要更详细地了解它们并进行战略管理。研究局限性/意义估值指标可能会有噪声,可能会影响信息事件。此外,在某些快节奏的行业,例如高科技行业,可能会更频繁地使用产品引入信号。实际意义管理者可以在产品沟通中纳入信号依赖。例如,在无成本的事前产品信号情况下,最初的经济损失可以通过发布公告来弥补。此外,如果较早使用了昂贵的信号,公司可能会在发布期间节省推广成本。独创性/价值过去的研究侧重于独立评估新产品信号的经济价值,即作为离散事件。由于上市信号依赖于事先的预先公告,因此没有对估值效应进行检验。实证结果表明,即使企业没有事先部署产品信号,也可以通过事后发布公告来创造价值。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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