Steph Grant

Steph Grant
  • PhD
  • Professor (Assistant) at University of Washington

About

23
Publications
1,737
Reads
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509
Citations
Current institution
University of Washington
Current position
  • Professor (Assistant)

Publications

Publications (23)
Article
Managerial myopia imposes significant costs on firms, stakeholders, and the overall economy. Research suggests that both a firm’s shareholder base and the frequency of its earnings guidance influence myopia. Shareholder bases have undergone significant changes in recent years as index fund ownership supplants long-term shareholder ownership, yet it...
Article
Investors face a difficult challenge in determining whether news they read is true or fake and, according to psychology theory, an additional challenge of ceasing to rely on news subsequently revealed to be fake. To help address this latter challenge, we examine whether prompting investors to be in a deliberative mindset reduces their reliance on n...
Article
As coined by the SEC, Digital Engagement Practices (DEPs) are visual cues and design features to engage investors on mobile trading platforms. With the rise of mobile stock trading, regulators and other capital market participants are concerned that these DEPs may cause retail investors to trade in ways they otherwise would not. Using an experiment...
Article
Full-text available
Recent regulatory amendments aimed at modernizing disclosures and enhancing their usefulness focus on repetition and interactivity within firms’ disclosure filings. We use two experiments to provide evidence on the effects of disclosure repetition (repeating of information in the filing) and disclosure interactivity (user involvement in directing t...
Article
Full-text available
I examine how characteristics of investors’ information access tools change investors’ reactions to firm disclosures. I examine my research question in the context of information choice (i.e., allowing investors to choose the order of information and sections to read within a disclosure) and spatial layout (i.e., how information is displayed when v...
Article
This study conducts two experiments to examine how investors’ judgments differ when they read a press release using either a mobile device or a computer. Results show that when investors use a mobile device, information related to a specific headline (mentioning a specific part of the news like “net income” or “revenue”) influences their investment...
Article
Technological advances are creating a shift in the information disclosure environment allowing more investors to interact with management. We examine three key levels of trader‐management interaction to assess the accuracy of traders’ market‐tested value estimates and resulting market price. These data require an engaging experiment and a complex,...
Article
We examine how CEOs can facilitate the development of investor trust that helps mitigate the effects of negative information. Results from an experiment show that investors trust the CEO more and are more willing to invest in the firm when the CEO communicates firm news followed by a negative earnings surprise through a personal Twitter account tha...
Article
We examine if investor expectations of two common disclosure mediums (conference calls and Twitter) interact with a CEO's communication style to influence investor judgments. Consistent with theory, results show that when the disclosure medium is a conference call, investors are less willing to invest when the CEO is modest about positive firm perf...
Article
Firms’ Corporate Social Responsibility ( CSR ) reports typically frame their strategies in terms of either community or global efforts (i.e., “strategy frame”). Further, the style used to depict CSR performance in reports often highlights either pictures or words (i.e., “presentation style”). These two prominent disclosure features of CSR reports p...
Article
We examine whether CEOs are able to influence how investors react to a negative earnings surprise by directly communicating with them via Twitter prior to the earnings surprise. Results show that investors exhibit higher levels of trust and are more willing to invest in a firm when the firm’s CEO communicates broad firm news followed by a negative...
Article
Firms’ Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) reports typically frame their strategies in terms of either community or global efforts. Further, the style used to depict CSR performance in reports often highlights either pictures or words. These two prominent disclosure features of CSR reports promote a natural fit or misfit in the focus (relatively...

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