Volume 72, Issue 4

The Long-Term Stock Market Valuation of Customer Satisfaction

Lerzan Aksoy, 1

1Lerzan Aksoy is Associate Professor of Marketing, Fordham University.


Bruce Cooil, 2

2Bruce Cooil is Dean Samuel B. and Evelyn R. Richmond Professor of Management, Owen Graduate School of Management, Vanderbilt University.


Christopher Groening, 3

3Christopher Groening is Assistant Professor of Marketing, College of Business, University of Missouri, Columbia.


Timothy L. Keiningham, 4

4Timothy L. Keiningham is Global Chief Strategy Officer and Executive Vice President, IPSOS Loyalty.


Atakan Yalçın5

5Atakan Yalçın is Assistant Professor of Finance, College of Administrative Sciences and Economics, Koç University.




Abstract

Firm valuation has been an important domain of interest for finance. However, most financial models do not include customer-related metrics in this process. Studies in marketing have found that one particular customer metric, customer satisfaction, improves the ability to predict future cash flows, long-term financial measures, stock performance, and shareholder value. However, most of these studies predominantly employ models that are not directly used in finance practice. This article extends existing literature by examining the impact of customer satisfaction on firm valuation by employing multiples and risk-adjusted abnormal return models borrowed directly from the practice of finance. Data include 3600 firm-quarter observations from the American Customer Satisfaction Index, COMPUSTAT, and Center for Research in Securities Prices databases from 1996 to 2006. The results indicate that a portfolio of stocks consisting of firms with high levels and positive changes in customer satisfaction will outperform the other three possible portfolio combinations (low levels and negative changes, low levels and positive changes, and high levels and negative changes in customer satisfaction) along with Standard & Poor's 500. Initially, the stock market undervalues positive satisfaction information, but the market adjusts in the long run.

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