Suzie Noh
Assistant Professor, Stanford Graduate School of Business
suzienoh@stanford.edu
Suzie Noh is an Assistant Professor of Accounting at Stanford Graduate School of Business.
Her research focuses on exploring the determinants and consequences of corporate disclosures, such as how financial reporting regulations affect firms' economic decisions or disclosure decisions, and how firms' disclosures affect the behavior of financial intermediaries and the information content of stock prices.
She holds a Bachelor‘s degree (summa cum laude) in Economics & Mathematics from Emory University, and a Master's degree in Finance and a PhD in Management both from MIT Sloan School of Management.
Publications
“Calendar Rotations: A New Approach for Studying the Impact of Timing using Earnings Announcements” with Eric So and Rodrigo Verdi. Journal of Financial Economics 140(3) 865-893, June 2021.
- Links: Paper, Online Appendix, Data.
“Voluntary and Mandatory Disclosures: Do Managers View Them as Substitutes?” with Eric So and Joseph Weber. Journal of Accounting and Economics 68(1) 101243, August 2019.
- Link: Paper.
Working Papers
“The Effect of Financial Reporting on Strategic Investments: Evidence from Purchase Obligations” (solo-authored)
- Links: Paper, Online Appendix.
“Financial Reporting and Consumer Behavior” with Eric So and Christina Zhu
- Link: Paper.
“How Does Internal Communication Technology Affect Internal Information: Theory and Evidence” with Lisa Yao Liu and Ehsan Azarmsa
- Link: Paper.
“Earnings News and Local Household Spending” with Brandon Gipper, Laura (Lingyu) Gu, and Jinhwan Kim
- Link: Paper.
Work In Progress
“How Costly is Public Information Processing?” with ed deHaan and Miao Liu