Stirek Assistant Professor of Finance
Finance

Brian Gibbons

Overview
Overview
Publications

Overview

Credentials

Ph.D. Pennsylvania State University (Finance, 2021)

Career Interests

I am the Stirek Assistant Professor of Finance at ºÚÁÏÍø¹ÙÍø. My empirical research is at the intersection of information economics and corporate governance. See the link below to navigate to my Google Scholar research page. 

Prior to my academic career, I worked as an equity research analyst at Credit Suisse in New York City. There, I covered companies in the industrial conglomerate and large-cap banking sectors. I also have experience working in the debt capital markets division of KeyBanc Capital Markets.

Publications

Academic Journal
Finance

“The Financially Material Effects of Mandatory Non-Financial Disclosureâ€

Complaints from institutional investors suggest that principles-based disclosure regimes that rely on financial materiality standards produce inadequate nonfinancial environmental and social (E&S) information. Using the staggered introduction of 40 country-level regulations that mandate disclosure, I document that reporting E&S information relates to increased investment from institutional owners and has material effects on firms’ investment and financing decisions. Firms mandated to disclose E&S information allocate more investment toward long-term, innovative projects and raise more equity capital. Evidence indicates that disclosure attracts long-term–oriented institutional clientele with E&S preferences, which then feeds back on firm decision making. Although the effects of nonfinancial disclosure are similar to those of improved financial disclosure, this clientele mechanism is unique. Taken together, these results suggest that jurisdictions that rely solely on financial materiality disclosure standards create nonfinancial information frictions with material effects on investors and firm decision making.
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Academic Journal
Finance

“Public Market Information and Venture Capital Investmentâ€

I study venture capital firms’ (VCs) use of public market information and how attention to this information relates to private market investment outcomes. I link web traffic to public filings hosted on EDGAR to individual VCs. VCs analyze public information about industry peers before most deals. An increase in industry filing views relates positively to the probability of an exit through acquisition, suggesting that public information helps identify paths to acquisition. The effect is stronger when the VC has less access to private information, especially for low-reputation VCs. Policymakers should consider spillover effects on private markets when setting public disclosure requirements.
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Academic Journal
Finance

“Analyst Information Acquisition via EDGARâ€

We identify analysts’ information acquisition patterns by linking EDGAR (Electronic Data Gathering, Analysis, and Retrieval) server activity to analysts’ brokerage houses. Analysts rely on EDGAR in 24% of their estimate updates with an average of eight filings viewed. We document that analysts’ attention to public information is driven by the demand for information and the analysts’ incentives and career concerns. We find that information acquisition via EDGAR is associated with a significant reduction in analysts’ forecasting error relative to their peers. This relationship is likewise present when we focus on the intensity of analyst research. Attention to public information further enables analysts to provide forecasts for more time periods and more financial metrics. Informed recommendation updates are associated with substantial and persistent abnormal returns, even when the analyst accesses historical filings. Analysts’ use of EDGAR is associated with longer and more informative analysis within recommendation reports.
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