Analyst Coverage, Group Affiliation, and Cost Stickiness: Evidence from South Korea

Authors

  • Kyoungwon Mo An associate professor at College of Business and Economics, Chung-Ang University, 84 Heukseok-ro, Dongjak-gu, Seoul 06974, South Korea.
  • YoungJin Kim An assistant professor at the Department of Accounting, Winona State University, 175 West Mark Street, Winona, MN 55987, USA.
  • Kyunbeom Jeong An associate professor at College of Social Sciences, Hansung University, 116 Samseongyo-ro 16-gil, Seongbuk-gu, Seoul 02876, South Korea.
  • Kyung Jin Park A professor at College of Business Administration, Myongji University, 34 Geobukgol-ro, Seodaemun-gu, Seoul 03674, South Korea.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22452/ajba.volume19no1.1

Keywords:

Chaebol, Cost stickiness, Financial analysts, Group affiliation

Abstract

Manuscript type: Research paper
Research aims: Financial analysts may improve corporate governance
by monitoring corporate behaviour, but close relationships with firms
may exacerbate agency costs. We examine these competing theories
by investigating the impact of affiliated analysts’ coverage on the cost
stickiness of firms within the same group.
Design/Methodology/Approach: We employ an empirical design using
a sample of South Korean companies. We add four analyst coverage
variables to the baseline cost stickiness equation from Anderson, Banker,
and Janakiraman (2003), indicating whether the analyst is affiliated and
whether affiliated analysts forecast firms affiliated within the same group.
We compare results between when affiliated analysts forecast samegroup-
affiliated firms and when they do not.
Research findings: Analyst coverage is negatively associated with cost
stickiness. However, when affiliated analysts forecast same-groupaffiliated
firms, analyst coverage is positively associated with cost stickiness. Hence, analysts’ monitoring role is ineffective when they
forecast the same group of firms. This positive relationship is more
pronounced when the chief executive officer’s power is high. The findings
are robust to endogeneity concerns.
Theoretical contribution/Originality: Using a unique institutional
setting in South Korea, we are able to investigate the effect of analysts’
group affiliation on managers’ cost management decisions. Our approach
effectively separates the two competing theories of analyst coverage.
Practitioner/Policy implication: The findings provide a better
understanding of the complex links underlying analysts’ monitoring role,
short-term horizon, and conflicts of interest to market participants.
Research limitation: We could not control for all factors that may
influence the investigated relationship.

Downloads

Published

30-06-2026

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Analyst Coverage, Group Affiliation, and Cost Stickiness: Evidence from South Korea. (2026). Asian Journal of Business and Accounting, 19(1), 7-36. https://doi.org/10.22452/ajba.volume19no1.1

Similar Articles

1-10 of 129

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.