The Gap in the U.S. Treasury Recommendations
| Published: | April 23, 2008 |
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| Feature: | Op-Ed |
U.S. Treasury recommendations for strengthening the regulation of the financial system are a good start but fall short, says Harvard Business School professor emeritus Dwight B. Crane. Here's his suggestion for bringing regulation into the 21st century.
New Challenges in Leading Professional Services
| Q&A with: | Thomas J. DeLong |
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| Published: | January 22, 2008 |
| Feature: | Research & Ideas |
Professional service firms are being challenged as never before—by clients, associates, and the competition, just for starters. But old-style PSF leaders are not equipped to respond, says Harvard Business School professor Thomas J. DeLong. He discusses his new book When Professionals Have to Lead. Plus: Book excerpt.
Published in 2004
The Bias of Wall Street Analysts
| Q&A with: | Mark T. Bradshaw |
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| Published: | October 18, 2004 |
| Feature: | Research & Ideas |
Historically, stock analysts’ recommendations have been swayed by business relationships between the analyst’s employer and the target company, says Professor Mark Bradshaw. Have recent SEC reforms helped?
Analyst Disagreement, Forecast Bias and Stock Returns
| Author: | Anna Scherbina |
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| Published: | July 5, 2006 |
| Paper Release Date: | July 2004 |
| Feature: | Working Papers |
It is well documented that financial analysts' opinions are reflected in stock prices. The problem: Analysts often operate under incentives that are inconsistent with telling the truth. Retail investors, who tend to be less sophisticated, may fail to make proper adjustments for the more nuanced of the resulting biases, some of which might be reflected in market prices. To study the scope of market efficiency, Scherbina studied analysts' incentives, resulting forecast biases, and their potential impact on market prices.













