Mj. Brennan et al., INVESTMENT ANALYSIS AND THE ADJUSTMENT OF STOCK-PRICES TO COMMON INFORMATION, The Review of financial studies, 6(4), 1993, pp. 799-824
In this article we are concerned with the effect of the number of inve
stment analysis following a firm on the speed of adjustment of the fir
m's stock price to new information that has common effects across firm
s. It is found that returns on portfolios of firms that are followed b
y many analysts tend to lead those of firms that are followed by fewer
analysts, even when the firms are of approximately the same size. Man
y analyst firms also tend to respond more rapidly to market returns th
an do few analyst firms, adjusting for firm size. This relation, howev
er, is nonlinear, and the marginal effect of the number of analysts on
the speed of price adjustment increases with the number of analysts.