CEOs Who Attend Investor Conferences See Lower Operating Performance

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Mark Melin
Published on
Updated on

Are executives who travel to exotic investor conferences where they can rub shoulders with financial analysts and investors wasting time and corporate resources? A new study says that while it might improve stock liquidity, operating performance can suffer. Researchers Paul Brockman, Musa Subasi, Cihan Uzmanoglu note in a study the positive impact that CEOs paying attention to investors pays off under certain circumstances and with specific company types, and that information democracy can lead to higher valuations. [munger] The Wall Street perception game and investor conferences There has always been a game on Wall Street, one of those illogical human…

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HFA Padded

Mark Melin is an alternative investment practitioner whose specialty is recognizing the impact of beta market environment on a technical trading strategy. A portfolio and industry consultant, wrote or edited three books including High Performance Managed Futures (Wiley 2010) and The Chicago Board of Trade’s Handbook of Futures and Options (McGraw-Hill 2008) and taught a course at Northwestern University's executive education program.