Charles M. C. Lee Explained

Charles Mien Chun Lee
Birth Date:12 October 1957
Birth Place:Taipei, Taiwan
Occupation:Behavioral economist, accounting academic and asset manager
Education:BMath
MBA
PhD
Alma Mater:University of Waterloo
Cornell University
Workplaces:Stanford University
University of Washington

Charles Mien Chun Lee (born 12 October 1957) is a behavioral economist, accounting academic, and asset manager. He is the Moghadam Family Professor Emeritus at Stanford University's Graduate School of Business and the Kermit O. Hanson Professor of Accounting at the University of Washington's Foster School of Business.[1] [2]

Lee's research focuses on how human cognitive limitations and other influences affect information processing in markets, with publications in behavioral finance, market microstructure, equity valuation, financial analysis, quantitative investing, and securities regulation.[3] He has received awards, such as the Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Accounting Association (AAA) Financial Accounting and Reporting Section (FARS) in 2024, the 2003 AAA Notable Contribution to Accounting Literature Prize,[4] Q Group's Roger F. Murray Prize in 2018,[5] as well as 12 awards for Teaching Excellence.[6] He has been the Presidential Scholar of the AAA and was awarded Stanford University's Asian American Faculty Award for Outstanding Achievements and Service to the university and the Asian American Community.[7]

Lee's work has been featured in media outlets such as The Economist,[8] The New York Times,[9] The Wall Street Journal,[10] National Public Radio (NPR), the LA Times,[11] Bloomberg,[12] CNBC,[13] Forbes,[14] Barron's,[15] and Institutional Investor.[16]

Education and early career

Lee earned a BMath from the University of Waterloo in 1981 followed by an MBA in 1989 and a PhD in 1990 from Cornell University. From 1980 to 1985, he worked in public accounting, with three years in the National Research Department of KPMG, Toronto, Canada. He holds a Certificate in Biblical Studies from Ontario Theological Seminary.[17]

Career

Lee's academic career is marked by positions at the Michigan Business School (1990–95), the Johnson Graduate School of Management, Cornell University (1996–2004), and the Graduate School of Business, Stanford University (2009–2021). Since 2022, he has been Moghadam Family Professor Emeritus at Stanford University's Graduate School of Business and the Kermit O. Hanson Professor of Accounting at the University of Washington's Foster School of Business.[18]

In 2004, he joined Barclays Global Investors (now BlackRock) as managing director and was later appointed global head of equity research in 2006.[19] In 2011, he co-founded Nipun Capital and has been acting as senior advisor since 2017.[20]

Another aspect of Lee's career has focused on Christianity, including his role as a board member of Ambassadors for Christ.[21]

Research

Lee's research has spanned behavioral finance, equity valuation, financial reporting, market efficiency, and security market regulation, with a focus on the impact of human cognitive limitations and various factors on information processing in markets.[3]

Behavioral finance

Lee has studied the impact of investor behavior and information processing on market dynamics. He explored how closed-end fund discounts are influenced by individual investor sentiment, finding that discounts narrow when small stocks perform well.[22] Later, he demonstrated that systematic retail investor trading, particularly in small-cap, value, and low-priced stocks, explains return comovements and supports the role of investor sentiment in return formation.[23] Furthermore, his investigation revealed that past trading volume links momentum and value strategies, with high volume correlating with lower future returns and low volume with higher returns.[24]

Analyzing over 2.5 million investor questions on a Chinese interactive platform, Lee and Qinlin Zhong revealed that resolution of investor difficulties in processing publicly available information contributes to increased market activity and improved stock price formation.[25]

Market efficiency

Lee's research has contributed to understanding the informational dynamics and interdependencies that influence market efficiency. In 2015, he co-authored Alphanomics: The Informational Underpinnings of Market Efficiency with Eric So, examining how information, investor behavior, and fundamental analysis contribute to market efficiency and drive abnormal returns.[26] His research indicated that production complementarity between firms from different industries drives co-movement in their activities and returns, with a lead-lag effect in returns that can be exploited for alpha.[27]

Collaborating with Mark J. Ready, Lee evaluated trade classification methods, identifying issues with quote-based approaches and proposing simpler procedures for improvement in classifying trades as either seller- or buyer-initiated.[28] In 2021, he and Edward Watts used SEC's randomized Tick Size Pilot experiment to show that a tick size increase leads to a decline in algorithmic trading but an increase in fundamental investor activity and overall improvement in pricing efficiency.[29]

Financial reporting and valuation

Lee has developed models and approaches in equity valuation and financial reporting. He introduced a model to estimate the cost of equity capital, observing that firm characteristics like industry, B/M ratio, growth rate, and analyst forecast dispersion explain much of the variation in implied costs-of-capital.[30] Building upon this, he examined the predictive power of an analyst-based valuation model, finding that the V/P ratio, derived from consensus forecasts, predicts long-term stock returns and can be improved by accounting for errors in earnings forecasts.[31]

In 2024, Lee devised an accounting-based Loan Portfolio Risk (LPR) variable and showed that the Equity-to-LPR ratio (ELPR) predicts bank failure and market-implied costs of capital, highlighting key risk factors not included in Basel Committee calculations.[32]

Personal life

Born Lee Mien Chun (李勉群) on October 12, 1957, in Taipei, Taiwan, to James and Cynthia Lee, he was the eldest of three children and migrated to Canada at age nine. In 1983, he married Lily C. Lee, and together they have two children.[33]

Awards and honors

Bibliography

Books

Selected articles

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Stanford Profiles–Charles Lee.
  2. Web site: Foster School of Business–Charles M.C. Lee.
  3. Web site: Google Scholar–Charles M C Lee.
  4. Web site: Notable Contributions to Accounting Literature Award.
  5. Web site: Roger F. Murray Prize.
  6. Web site: Students Honor Three Faculty Members With 2017 Teaching Awards. 4 June 2013 .
  7. Web site: AAA Presidential Scholars.
  8. News: Cliffhanger on Wall Street. The Economist .
  9. Web site: Market Place; Investors Hurt When Trades Shift. .
  10. Web site: Chinese Firms Perform Better With Reverse Mergers Than IPOs.
  11. Web site: How to Avoid Hidden Fee of 'Side' Exchanges. . 20 April 1992 .
  12. News: ETFs Are Where the Fun Is. Bloomberg . 29 October 2024 .
  13. Web site: Chinese reverse mergers are not toxic: Study. . 17 September 2013 .
  14. Web site: Carving Smart Alpha From The S&P 500. .
  15. Web site: Evidence That Short Sellers Profit From Mutual Fund Moves.
  16. Web site: Using Behavioral Finance to Better Understand the Psychology of Investors. 12 May 2010 .
  17. Web site: University of Waterloo–Charles Lee.
  18. Web site: Stanford Business–Charles M. C. Lee.
  19. Web site: Spotlight on AAPI.
  20. Web site: Nipun Capital.
  21. Web site: Veritas Forum.
  22. Investor Sentiment and the Closed-End Fund Puzzle. 1991 . 10.1111/j.1540-6261.1991.tb03746.x . Lee . Charles M. C. . Shleifer . Andrei . Thaler . Richard H. . The Journal of Finance . 46 . 75–109 .
  23. Retail Investor Sentiment and Return Comovements. 2006 . 10.1111/j.1540-6261.2006.01063.x . Kumar . Alok . Lee . Charles M.C. . The Journal of Finance . 61 . 5 . 2451–2486 .
  24. Price Momentum and Trading Volume. 2000 . 10.1111/0022-1082.00280 . Lee . Charles M.C. . Swaminathan . Bhaskaran . The Journal of Finance . 55 . 5 . 2017–2069 .
  25. Shall we talk? The role of interactive investor platforms in corporate communication. 2022 . 10.1016/j.jacceco.2022.101524 . Lee . Charles M.C. . Zhong . Qinlin . Journal of Accounting and Economics . 74 . 2–3 .
  26. Web site: Alphanomics The Informational Underpinnings of Market Efficiency.
  27. Production complementarity and information transmission across industries. 2024 . 10.1016/j.jfineco.2024.103812 . Lee . Charles M.C. . Shi . Terrence Tianshuo . Sun . Stephen Teng . Zhang . Ran . Journal of Financial Economics . 155 .
  28. Inferring Trade Direction from Intraday Data. 1991 . 10.1111/j.1540-6261.1991.tb02683.x . Lee . Charles M. C. . Ready . Mark J. . The Journal of Finance . 46 . 2 . 733–746 .
  29. Tick Size Tolls: Can a Trading Slowdown Improve Earnings News Discovery?. 2021 . 10.2308/TAR-2018-0689 . Lee . Charles M. C. . Watts . Edward M. . The Accounting Review . 96 . 3 . 373–401 .
  30. Toward an Implied Cost of Capital. 2001 . 10.1111/1475-679X.00007 . Gebhardt . William R. . Lee . Charles M. C. . Swaminathan . Bhaskaran . Journal of Accounting Research . 39 . 135–176 .
  31. Accounting valuation, market expectation, and cross-sectional stock returns. 1998 . 10.1016/S0165-4101(98)00026-3 . Frankel . Richard . Lee . Charles M.C. . Journal of Accounting and Economics . 25 . 3 . 283–319 . free .
  32. ELPR: A New Measure of Capital Adequacy for Commercial Banks. 2024 . 10.2308/TAR-2020-0661 . Lee . Charles M. C. . Wang . Yanruo . Zhong . Qinlin . The Accounting Review . 99 . 337–365 .
  33. Web site: Foster Accounting Faculty Spotlight: Charles M. C. Lee. 7 June 2024 .