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Labor Market Networks and Asset Returns

Time:2022-04-21 View:
时间 10:00, Apr. 28th, 2022 地点 Tencent Meeting ID: 808-167-230
主讲人 Associate Professor Xiaofei Zhao, Georgetown University, USA

Topic: Labor Market Networks and Asset Returns

Speaker: Associate Professor Xiaofei Zhao, Georgetown University, USA

Time and Date: 10:00, Apr. 28th, 2022

Platform: Tencent Meeting ID: 808-167-230

Speaker Profile:

Xiaofei Zhao is an Associate Professor of Finance at Georgetown University. His primary research interests are in the areas of asset pricing and information economics. His research papers have been published in the American Economic Review, Review of Financial Studies, Journal of Financial Economics, Management Science, among others. He was an Assistant Professor of Finance at Georgetown (2018-2020) and UT Dallas (2013-2018). He received his PhD in Finance from the University of Toronto in 2013.

Abstract:

This paper proposes a measure of labor market connectivity based on the similarity in the composition of occupational knowledge characteristics across industries and provides evidence of return predictability in the cross-section of industries that are connected through the labor market. In long-short portfolios, an industry's return is strongly predicted by the past return of its labor-market-connected neighboring industries with an annualized return of up to 9%, which is not explained by established asset pricing models. The return predictability remains significant after controlling for the supply chain momentum, technological innovation similarity, and the industry lead-lag effect, and is concentrated in stocks with higher arbitrage costs and higher ownership of uninformed investors. We find similar predictive relations for the labor productivity, wages, employment, and profitability of labor connected industries. Our findings are consistent with positive spillover of productivity shocks among industries that are connected through the labor market. Informational frictions, costly arbitrage, and investors' limited attention magnify the delayed response of stock prices to the spillover of labor productivity shocks, which results in the observed return predictability.