Abstract
This paper investigates systematic changes in the value-relevance of earnings and book values over time. We report three primary findings. First, contrary to claims in the professional literature, the combined value-relevance of earnings and book values has not declined over the past forty years and, in fact, appears to have increased slightly. Second, while the incremental value-relevance of ?bottom line? earnings has declined, it has been replaced by increasing value-relevance of book values. Finally, much of the shift in value-relevance from earnings to book values can be explained by the increasing frequency and magnitude of one-time items, the increasing frequency of negative earnings, and changes in average firm size and intangible intensity across time.
Full Citation
Collins, Daniel and Edward Maydew. “The Value-Revelance of Earnings and Book Values Over the Past Forty Years.”
Journal of Accounting and Economics
vol. 24,
(December 01, 1997): 39-67.