TY - JOUR
T1 - Tick Size and Firm Financing Decisions: Evidence from a Natural Experiment
AU - CHEN, Yangyang
AU - NG, Jeffrey
AU - OFOSU, Emmanuel
AU - YANG, Xin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025
PY - 2025/9
Y1 - 2025/9
N2 - Using the SEC’s 2016 Tick Size Pilot Program (TSPP) as a natural experiment, we investigate the effects of a tick size increase on firms’ choice of equity versus debt financing. We find that after the program’s implementation, TSPP-affected firms show a significant increase in equity issuance relative to that of debt. This finding is consistent with a reduction in adverse selection in equity financing due to more acquisition of fundamental information by these firms’ investors. In support of this inference, we show that the increase is concentrated among firms with investors that increase their information acquisition. We also find that the effect is more pronounced for firms that, prior to the program, have a higher level of concern about adverse selection in equity financing. Our study offers the novel insight that a tick size increase can affect firms’ financing choices because the increased tick size generates incentives for investors to acquire more fundamental information.
AB - Using the SEC’s 2016 Tick Size Pilot Program (TSPP) as a natural experiment, we investigate the effects of a tick size increase on firms’ choice of equity versus debt financing. We find that after the program’s implementation, TSPP-affected firms show a significant increase in equity issuance relative to that of debt. This finding is consistent with a reduction in adverse selection in equity financing due to more acquisition of fundamental information by these firms’ investors. In support of this inference, we show that the increase is concentrated among firms with investors that increase their information acquisition. We also find that the effect is more pronounced for firms that, prior to the program, have a higher level of concern about adverse selection in equity financing. Our study offers the novel insight that a tick size increase can affect firms’ financing choices because the increased tick size generates incentives for investors to acquire more fundamental information.
KW - Adverse selection
KW - Small-cap firm financing
KW - Tick size increase
KW - Tick size pilot program
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105014255784
U2 - 10.1016/j.jempfin.2025.101651
DO - 10.1016/j.jempfin.2025.101651
M3 - Journal Article (refereed)
SN - 0927-5398
VL - 83
JO - Journal of Empirical Finance
JF - Journal of Empirical Finance
M1 - 101651
ER -