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  1. The Impact of Fraudulent False Information on Equity Values.Saif Ullah, Nadia Massoud & Barry Scholnick - 2014 - Journal of Business Ethics 120 (2):219-235.
    There are two types of stock price manipulation examined in the theoretical literature: insider trading, which involves private information that is true and the public spreading of fraudulent false information. While there is a large empirical literature on insider trading, this is the first empirical article to examine the impact of false, fraudulent public information on stock prices and trading volume. We find that such false information, even after being denied by a credible source such as the SEC, generates both (...)
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  • Keeping Promises? Mutual Funds’ Investment Objectives and Impact of Carbon Risk Disclosures.John R. Nofsinger & Abhishek Varma - 2022 - Journal of Business Ethics 187 (3):493-516.
    In response to Morningstar’s release of carbon risk (CR) scores in May 2018, (environmentally) sustainable mutual funds in the U.S. showed a greater reduction in their portfolio CR relative to conventional funds. The observed causal impact of this third-party disclosure is consistent with the funds’ primary investment objectives. Differences in fund names, potentially driven by marketing considerations, appear irrelevant to the behavior of sustainable funds. Conventional funds that are signatories to the UN’s Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI) or those with (...)
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