Latest on Financial Accounting & Auditing
Financial Accounting & Auditing Faculty
Financial Accounting & Auditing Research
Abnormal Returns to Investment Strategies Based on the Timing of Earnings Reports
- Authors
- Date
- December 1, 1984
- Format
-
Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of Accounting and Economics
This paper adds to recent evidence on market inefficiency in processing information in earnings reports. It documents that short positions taken in sample stocks which did not report earnings by the date expected during the sample period, 1971–1976, would have been abnormally profitable, before transaction costs. This is because late reports, on average, revealed bad news which was not anticipated in market prices prior to the report date.
Timeliness of Reporting and the Stock Price Reaction to Earnings Announcements
- Authors
-
Anne Chambers and Stephen Penman
- Date
- January 1, 1984
- Format
-
Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of Accounting Research
In this paper we examine the effect of filing form 10-K on EDGAR on the incidence of small and large trades.
Hospital Funding Constraints: Strategic and Tactical Decision responses to Sustained Moderate Levels of Crisis in Six Canadian Hospitals
The Predictive Content of Earnings Forecasts and Dividends
This paper compares the properties of dividend announcements and management earnings forecasts as predictors of earnings and firm value. First, the two predictors are compared on the basis of their ability to predict earnings. Then the information they convey about firm value is assessed by comparison of the performance of investment strategies based on values of the two predictors. Finally, the effects of dividend announcements on stock prices are considered.
Insider Trading and the Dissemination of Firms' Forecast Information
- Authors
- Date
- October 1, 1982
- Format
-
Journal Article
- Journal
- <a href="http://www.jstor.org/action/showPublisher?publisherCode=ucpress">Journal of Business</a>
Evidence is given in this paper which indicates that corporate insiders time their trades in their firms' stock relative to the date of the disclosure of their forecasts of annual earnings. Further, insiders earn abnormal returns to their joint trading and information dissemination activities, and the paper provides measures of these returns.
Book Rate of Return and Prediction of Earnings Changes: An Empirical Investigation
- Authors
- Date
- January 1, 1982
- Format
-
Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of Accounting Research
Over the years, there has developed a fairly substantial body of research on the time series of earnings. As a whole, this literature concludes that changes in (annual) accounting earnings are unpredictable, that is, earnings follow a "random walk." Based on this result, some inferences of economic substance (policy) have been claimed. In this paper we reconsider empirical issues which, at least to some extent, have been obscured by this conclusion.
Arrow-Debreu Preferences and the Reopening of Contingent Claims Markets
- Authors
- Date
- January 1, 1981
- Format
-
Journal Article
- Journal
- Economics Letters
The Arrow-Debreu intertemporal general equilibrium paradigm is typically interpreted as suggesting that contingent claims markets need not reopen as time passes and uncertainty resolves. We show that this property, if satisfied, has strong implications for the structure of agents' preferences and for the updating of probabilistic beliefs.
An Empirical Investigation of the Voluntary Disclosure of Corporate Earnings Forecasts
- Authors
- Date
- January 1, 1980
- Format
-
Journal Article
- Journal
- Journal of Accounting Research
This paper assesses the ability of markets to convey information about firms to investors. The present system of disclosure rules has been restricted to historical data. Recently there have been proposals to bring predictive data—in particular, earnings forecasts—under the scope of a disclosure rule. Forecasts of future earnings are, at present, being provided by many corporate managements.