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Title: 

INSIDE INFORMATION AND THE OWN COMPANY STOCK PUZZLE

Authors: Nieuwerburgh, Stijn Van
Issue Date: 20-Sep-2005
Series/Report no.: SC-AM-05-07
Abstract: U.S. investors allocate 30-40% of their financial asset portfolio in the stock of the company stock they work for. Such a portfolio flies in the face of standard portfolio theory, which prescribes that an investor should hold less of a financial asset that is positively correlated with her undiversified labor income. Nevertheless, we propose a rational explanation that prescribes a long position in own company stock. Precisely because the own company stock is positively correlated with the investor's labor income, any information the investor learns about her earnings is a partial information advantage in her own company stock. When confronted with a choice of what information to acquire, employees may choose to learn about their own firm. Learning lowers the employee's risk of holding own-firm equity, which raises its risk-adjusted returns and makes a long position optimal.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/2451/26637
Appears in Collections:Asset Management

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