Who likes jargon? The joint effect of jargon type and industry knowledge on investors’ judgments
We experimentally investigate how jargon affects investment willingness for investors with different industry knowledge, and whether such effects vary with good or bad jargon. We find that for investors without industry knowledge, jargon decreases investment willingness because it decreases understa...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1444542023-05-19T07:31:16Z Who likes jargon? The joint effect of jargon type and industry knowledge on investors’ judgments Tan, Hun-Tong Wang, Elaine Ying Yoo, G-Song Nanyang Business School Business::Finance Jargon Industry Knowledge We experimentally investigate how jargon affects investment willingness for investors with different industry knowledge, and whether such effects vary with good or bad jargon. We find that for investors without industry knowledge, jargon decreases investment willingness because it decreases understanding. However, for investors with some but low industry knowledge, jargon increases investment willingness because it increases perceived product premium. Such effects exist whether good or bad jargon is used. Finally, investors with high industry knowledge differentiate between good and bad jargon, and reduce investment willingness only when bad jargon is used. These findings have implications for regulators, managers, and investors. Ministry of Education (MOE) Accepted version We are grateful for helpful comments from Michelle Hanlon (editor), William Mayew (referee), Pjotr Akulinitsev, Bradley Bennett, Jeremy Bentley, Lukas Helikum, Yoon Ju Kang, Kyle Stubbs, Tu Xu, Yao Yu, and seminar participants at University of Massachusetts Amherst and Nanyang Technological University. We thank Nikki Mackenzie, Matt Starliper, Yanjia Yang, and Tongrui Cao for research assistance, and the Singapore Ministry of Education Academic Research Fund Tier 1 (RG58/17) for financial support. 2020-11-06T01:54:37Z 2020-11-06T01:54:37Z 2019 Journal Article Tan, H.-T., Wang, E. Y., & Yoo, G.-S. (2019). Who likes jargon? The joint effect of jargon type and industry knowledge on investors’ judgments. Journal of Accounting and Economics, 67(2–3), 416–437. doi:10.1016/j.jacceco.2019.03.001 0165-4101 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144454 10.1016/j.jacceco.2019.03.001 2-3 67 416 437 en Journal of Accounting and Economics © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. This paper was published in Journal of Accounting and Economics and is made available with permission of Elsevier B.V. application/pdf |
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Business::Finance Jargon Industry Knowledge Tan, Hun-Tong Wang, Elaine Ying Yoo, G-Song Who likes jargon? The joint effect of jargon type and industry knowledge on investors’ judgments |
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We experimentally investigate how jargon affects investment willingness for investors with different industry knowledge, and whether such effects vary with good or bad jargon. We find that for investors without industry knowledge, jargon decreases investment willingness because it decreases understanding. However, for investors with some but low industry knowledge, jargon increases investment willingness because it increases perceived product premium. Such effects exist whether good or bad jargon is used. Finally, investors with high industry knowledge differentiate between good and bad jargon, and reduce investment willingness only when bad jargon is used. These findings have implications for regulators, managers, and investors. |
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Nanyang Business School |
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Nanyang Business School Tan, Hun-Tong Wang, Elaine Ying Yoo, G-Song |
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Article |
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Tan, Hun-Tong Wang, Elaine Ying Yoo, G-Song |
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Tan, Hun-Tong |
title |
Who likes jargon? The joint effect of jargon type and industry knowledge on investors’ judgments |
title_short |
Who likes jargon? The joint effect of jargon type and industry knowledge on investors’ judgments |
title_full |
Who likes jargon? The joint effect of jargon type and industry knowledge on investors’ judgments |
title_fullStr |
Who likes jargon? The joint effect of jargon type and industry knowledge on investors’ judgments |
title_full_unstemmed |
Who likes jargon? The joint effect of jargon type and industry knowledge on investors’ judgments |
title_sort |
who likes jargon? the joint effect of jargon type and industry knowledge on investors’ judgments |
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2020 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144454 |
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1772826895872688128 |