Strategic learning and corporate investment

Authors Decaire, Wittry
Year 2022
Type Working Paper
Abstract We show that firms anticipate information spillover from peers' investment decisions and delay project exercise to learn from them. While this information improves project selection, the cost of waiting erodes these gains. To establish causality, we exploit local exogenous variation from the 1800s that shapes the number of peers that a firm can learn from today. The effect is most salient when information is scarce, costs of waiting are low, projects have low expected profitability, and the source information is more relevant. Finally, the anticipation of spillovers dampens aggregate investment, suggesting a role for this mechanism in macro-investment models.
Keywords Real options, strategic interactions, learning, peer behavior, investment, historical data
URL https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3923811
Tags Archival Empirical  |   Investment Decisions (Institutional)  |   Manager / Firm Behavior