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Financial Accounting & Auditing

See the latest research, articles and faculty on the Financial Accounting & Auditing Area of Expertise at Columbia Business School.

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Financial Accounting & Auditing Faculty

Financial Accounting & Auditing Research

Accounting Measurement, Price-Earnings Ratio and the Information Content of Security Prices

Authors
Jane Ou and Stephen Penman
Date
January 1, 1989
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Accounting Research

In this paper we show that information in prices that leads (future) earnings is contained in financial statements. While accrual accounting rules produce an earnings number which reflects the information in stock prices with a lag, they also produce a large array of additional numbers presented in the income statement, balance sheet, and statement of changes in financial position. We demonstrate that certain of these numbers can be summarized into one measure that predicts future earnings.

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Components of the Bid-Ask Spread and the Statistical Properties of Transaction Prices

Authors
Lawrence Glosten
Date
December 1, 1987
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Finance

The bid-ask spread can be decomposed into two parts: one part due to asymmetric information and the other part due to other factors such as monopoly power. The part due to asymmetric information attenuates statistical biases in mean return, variance, and serial covariance. Thus, using spread data to adjust for biases in return moments requires knowing not only the spread but the composition of the spread. Furthermore, any spread-estimation procedure using transaction prices must estimate two spread components.

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The Distribution of Earnings News over Time and Seasonalities in Aggregate Stock Returns

Authors
Stephen Penman
Date
June 1, 1987
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Financial Economics

Over the past 55 years returns on stock market indexes have on average been higher during the first half-month of calendar quarters 2 through 4 than at other times. Coincidentally, aggregate corporate earnings news arriving at the market during these half-month periods tends to be good, whereas earnings reports arriving later are more likely to convey bad news. In addition firms tend to publish bad-news earnings reports on Mondays, coincident with negative Monday effects in stock returns.

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Managing and Coping with Budget Cut Stress in Hospitals

Authors
Todd Jick
Date
January 1, 1987
Format
Chapter
Book
Stress in the Health Professions
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"The Global Case." A set of microcomputer case studies in financial accounting

Authors
Stephen Penman
Date
January 1, 1987
Format
Case Study
Publisher
Coopers & Lybrand Foundation and American Accounting Association Accounting Education Series
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Ricardian Consumers with Keynesian Propensities

Authors
Robert Barsky, N. Mankiw, and Stephen Zeldes
Date
September 1, 1986
Format
Journal Article
Journal
American Economic Review

This paper examines Ricardian equivalence in a world in which taxes are not lump sum, but are levied on risky labor income. It shows that the marginal propensity to consume out of a tax cut, coupled with a future income tax increase, can be substantial under plausible assumptions. Indeed, the MPC out of a tax cut can be closer to the Keynesian value that ignores the future tax liabilities than to the Ricardian value that treats future taxes as if they were lump sum.

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Volatility Increases Subsequent to Stock Splits: An Empirical Aberration

Authors
James Ohlson and Stephen Penman
Date
June 1, 1985
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Financial Economics

This paper analyzes the empirical behavior of stock-return volatilities prior to and subsequent to the ex-dates of stock splits. The evidence demonstrates rather unambiguously that there is, on the average, an approximately 30% "arbitrary" increase in the return standard deviations following the ex-date. The increase holds for both daily and weekly data, and it is not temporary. No explanatory confounding variables, such as institutional frictions affecting price observations, have been identified.

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A Comparison of the Information Content of Insider Trading and Management Earnings Forecasts

Authors
Stephen Penman
Date
March 1, 1985
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis

In this paper, insider trading is viewed as a signal of managements' assessments of firms' future prospects and its information content is compared to that in managements' earnings forecasts. These forecasts are explicit statements of managements' assessments of future prospects. A number of measures of insider trading designed to capture the information aspect of trading are investigated.

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Retrenchment and Recovery: American Cities and the New York Experience

Authors
Raymond Horton and Charles Brecher
Date
January 1, 1985
Format
Journal Article
Journal
Public Administration Review

This paper relates New York City's experience since 1975, a period characterized by local economic and fiscal crisis and a gradual recovery from it, to four prevailing themes in the contemporary literature of cities and public administration.

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