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Retail Bond Investors and Credit Ratings J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2023-03-16 Ed deHaan, Jiacui Li, Edward M. Watts
Using comprehensive data on U.S. corporate bond trades since 2002, we find evidence that retail bond investors overrely on untimely credit ratings to their financial detriment. Specifically, they appear to select bonds by first screening on a credit rating and then sorting by yield, buying the highest-yielding bonds within each rating level. Because yields lead credit rating changes, selecting on yield-within-rating
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Contracting in the Dark: The Rise of Public-Side Lenders in the Syndicated Loan Market* J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2023-02-17 Hami Amiraslani, John Donovan, Matthew A. Phillips, Regina Wittenberg-Moerman
We document a novel trend in syndicated lending where some participants voluntarily waive their rights to borrowers’ private information. We posit that “public-side” lending emerged to facilitate broad lender participation in the syndicated loan market by mitigating concerns about the leakage of borrowers’ private information into public securities markets. In line with this proposition, we find that
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Public Firm Disclosures and the Market for Innovation* J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2023-01-31 Jinhwan Kim, Kristen Valentine
We examine the spillover effect of public firm disclosures on the patent trading market. The patent market is rife with information frictions, yet can potentially facilitate the reallocation of innovation to the most productive users. We find that going from the 25th percentile to the 75th percentile in public firm presence – our proxy for public firm disclosures – is linked to a 9.4% increase in other
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Compensation Regulation in Banking: Executive Director Behavior and Bank Performance after the EU Bonus Cap* J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2023-01-02 Stefano Colonnello, Michael Koetter, Konstantin Wagner
The regulation that caps executives’ variable compensation, as part of the Capital Requirements Directive IV of 2013, likely affected executive turnover, compensation design, and risk-taking in EU banking. The current study identifies significantly higher average turnover rates but also finds that they are driven by CEOs at poorly performing banks. Banks indemnified their executives by off-setting
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Explaining accruals quality over time J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-12-30 Theodore E. Christensen, Jenna D’Adduzio, Karen K. Nelson
We provide evidence that accruals quality in the U.S. has generally improved since 2000, following a decade of decline during the 1990s. Our results indicate that both the initial decline in accruals quality and the subsequent reversal can be explained by an inverse relation with operating cash flow volatility. Moreover, even though patterns of cash flow volatility and accruals quality vary in different
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Executive Compensation, Individual-Level Tax Rates, and Insider Trading Profits* J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-12-26 Nathan Goldman, Naim Bugra Ozel
We examine whether individual-level taxes affect executives’ propensity to use nonpublic information in insider trades. We predict and find a positive relation between abnormal insider trading profitability and income tax rates. Using plausibly exogenous variation in state income tax rates, we estimate that the average executive uses insider trading profits to offset between 12.2% and 19.6% of the
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Lost in Standardization: Effects of Financial Statement Database Discrepancies on Inference J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-12-26 Kai Du, Steven Huddart, Xin Daniel Jiang
SEC-mandated, machine-readable structured filings, or “as-filed data,” are an alternative source to Compustat for companies’ accounting data. Discrepancies between as-filed and Compustat data, potentially a result of Compustat’s standardizations, are more pronounced for firms with complex financial reporting. We show that these data discrepancies affect inferences in four research settings: (i) properties
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Accounting Conservatism and Relational Contracting J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-12-05 Jonathan Glover, Hao Xue
“Accounting Conservatism and Relational Contracting” This paper develops a positive role for accounting conservatism in fostering relational contracts between two agents in a two-period model of moral hazard. Building on Kreps (1996), the principal in our model designs a conservative measurement system and optimal contracts to create multiple equilibria that foster a team-based corporate culture. Accruals
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Remote Tax Authority J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-11-26 Andrew Belnap, Anthony Welsch, Braden Williams
Tax enforcement and compliance are critical features of any tax system. One way that prior studies examine these topics is by measuring taxpayer responses to different types of letters from a tax authority. We extend this research by focusing on ‘remote firms’ – firms with no physical presence in the tax authority’s jurisdiction – and examining sales tax compliance. Specifically, we partner with the
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How Does Shareholder Governance Affect the Cost of Borrowing? Evidence from the Passage of Anti-Takeover Provisions J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-11-24 Yukun Liu, Xi Wu
This paper examines the effect of shareholder governance on firms’ cost of borrowing using the voting outcomes of shareholder-sponsored anti-takeover governance proposals. Implementing a regression discontinuity design centered around the proposals’ passing thresholds, we show that firms’ public debt prices fall significantly upon the proposals’ passage, and that banks demand higher interest rates
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The Wisdom of Crowds and the Market’s Response to Earnings News: Evidence Using the Geographic Dispersion of Investors J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-11-15 Jason V. Chen
The wisdom of crowds suggests that groups with more diversely informed individuals reach more informed decisions because their members are collectively more knowledgeable. I study this idea in the context of the market’s response to earnings announcements by examining how information diversity across investors affects the efficiency of the price response to earnings news. I measure investors’ information
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Tax and tariff planning through transfer prices: The role of the head office and business unit J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-11-13 Saskia Kohlhase, Jacco L. Wielhouwer
We study the roles of the head office (HO) and the business units (BUs) of a multinational corporation (MNC) in reducing income tax and tariff payments through internal transfer prices in international trades. Using confidential transfer price data of a large MNC, we analyze how the different elements of internal transfer prices set by the HO and BUs vary differently from external prices with income
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Economic Consequences of Operating Lease Recognition J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-11-09 Mark Ma, Wayne B. Thomas
Accounting Standards Update No. 2016-02 (ASU 2016-02) generated considerable debate between managers and standard setters. We find evidence that after issuance of ASU 2016-02, lessee firms decreased their use of long-term operating leases, increased their use of short-term operating leases, and increased their use of capital expenditures. The shift from long-term operating leases to capital expenditures
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The Economic Consequences of GASB Financial Statement Disclosure J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-10-27 Michael Dambra, Omri Even-Tov., James P. Naughton
We examine whether Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB) financial statement disclosure alters local governments’ economic decision-making. To do so, we exploit a recent GASB standard that eliminated differences in the disclosure requirements for county governments’ pension obligations. The standard, GASB 68, had no effect on pension economics or the annual budget—it affected only whether
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Do Managers Learn from Institutional Investors through Direct Interactions? J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-10-22 Rachel Xi Zhang
I examine whether corporate managers learn from institutional investors through direct interactions at investor conferences. I find that managers seek more direct interactions with institutional investors at conferences when they have a greater need for information about their firm’s product markets and supply chains. This relation is stronger when managers expect investors to be knowledgeable. I also
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Do Tax-Based Proprietary Costs Discourage Public Listing? J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-10-19 Benjamin P. Yost
This study investigates whether tax-based proprietary costs associated with being a public firm (i.e., costs resulting from increased visibility to the tax authority) discourage public listing. I exploit the introduction of a mandatory disclosure requirement (FIN 48) which generated a signal to the government regarding the uncertainty of public firms’ tax positions, allowing for more carefully targeted
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Political Euphoria and Corporate Disclosures: An Investigation of CEO Partisan Alignment with the President of the United States J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-09-28 Mazhar Arikan, Mehmet Kara, Adi Masli, Yaoyi Xi
We examine how the partisan alignment between chief executive officers (CEOs) and the United States president influences corporate disclosure outcomes. We predict and find evidence that more partisan-aligned CEOs display greater optimism in their corporate disclosures. CEO partisan alignment is positively associated with the likelihood of issuing a management earnings forecast and issuing overly optimistic
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Assurance Level Choice, CPA Fees, and Financial Reporting Benefits: Inferences from U.S. Private Firms J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-09-22 Brad A. Badertscher, Jaewoo Kim, William R. Kinney, Edward Owens
Many U.S. private firms choose either a financial statement compilation or review rather than the higher assurance provided by an audit, yet little is known about these choices. We explore economic aspects of private firm choice of less-than-audit levels of assurance applied to GAAP-based financial statements. We find that CPA fees more than double for each increment in assurance. Commonly used financial
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Towards a design-based approach to accounting research J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-09-16 Christian Leuz
Armstrong et al. (2022) review the empirical methods used in the accounting literature to draw causal inferences. They document a growing number of studies using quasi-experimental methods and provide a critical perspective on this trend as well as the use of these methods in the accounting literature. In this discussion, I complement their review by broadening the perspective. I argue for a design-based
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How does private firm disclosure affect demand for public firm equity? Evidence from the global equity market J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-08-31 Jinhwan Kim, Marcel Olbert
We investigate the relationship between private firms' disclosures and the demand for the equity of their publicly traded peers. Using data on the global movement of portfolio investments in public equity, we find that a 10% increase in private firm disclosure transparency – proxied by the number of disclosed private firms' financial statement line items – reduces global investors’ demand for public
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A Reexamination of Investors’ Reaction to Tax Shelter News: Evidence from the Luxembourg Tax Leaks J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-08-30 Wayne L. Nesbitt, Edmund Outslay, Anh V. Persson
This study examines the stock market reaction to the unprecedented leaks of confidential advance tax rulings between Luxembourg and multinational corporations—also known as the “LuxLeaks.” Contrary to the negative market reaction to tax shelter news documented in prior research, we find that investors responded positively to these leaks. This reaction is concentrated among U.S. firms. Furthermore,
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Importing activists: Determinants and consequences of increased cross-border shareholder activism J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-08-29 Mark Maffett, Anya Nakhmurina, Douglas J. Skinner
We analyze nearly 7,000 shareholder activist campaigns across 56 countries and show that shareholder activism is now a global phenomenon. Our analyses provide evidence on factors that explain the spread of activism and two related questions. First, we measure the extent to which country-level governance regulations facilitate shareholder engagement, a necessary condition for activism, and show that
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Discussion of ‘Importing Activists: Determinants and Consequences of Increased Cross-border shareholder activism’ J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-08-28 Michelle Lowry
Maffett et al. (2022) [Importing Activists: Determinants and Consequences of Increased Cross-border shareholder activism. Journal of Accounting and Economics, forthcoming] find that regulations on shareholder engagement and board structure lead to increased shareholder activism. How generalizable is this conclusion: can we conclude more generally that shareholder empowering regulations contribute to
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Does greater private firm disclosure affect public equity markets? A discussion of Kim and Olbert (2022) J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-08-27 Michael Minnis
One of the most significant capital market developments over the last two decades has been the growth of private capital markets—markets that raise capital outside of publicly traded venues and can face substantially less mandated public financial reporting. Understanding the causes and consequences of the relative growth of private capital markets is a first order research question. As private capital
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Predictive analytics and centralization of authority J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-08-24 Eva Labro, Mark Lang, James D. Omartian
We examine the relation between plant-level predictive analytics use and centralization of authority for more than 25,000 manufacturing plants using proprietary US Census data. We focus on headquarters' authority over plants through delegation of decision-making and design of performance-based incentives. We find that increased predictive analytics use is associated with reduced delegation of decision-rights
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Is corporate transparency the solution to political failure on our greatest problems? A discussion of Darendeli, Fiechter, Hitz, and Lehmann (2022) J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-08-24 Hans B. Christensen
Advocacy groups have responded to the lack of political solutions to some of the greatest problems we face—from climate change to armed conflicts—by lobbying for securities regulation that increases corporate transparency. They aim to incentivize corporations to address problems that lack other political solutions. I discuss what we can (and cannot) learn about the efficacy of reporting mandates from
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Parallels between structural estimation and causal inference: A discussion of Armstrong et al. (2022) J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-08-23 Toni M. Whited
Armstrong et al. (2022) review the various econometric methods that have been used to draw causal inference in the accounting literature and offer an alternative method for conducting research when causal methods are not applicable. This discussion provides background for the emphasis on causal inference in accounting. It also draws parallels between the authors' proposed quasi-causal method and the
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Appraisal rights and corporate disclosure during mergers and acquisitions J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-08-12 Christopher R. Stewart
Target shareholders have the right to ask for a higher merger price if good news emerges after a merger agreement. This “appraisal right” varies with state law and was substantially strengthened in Delaware in 2007. I examine how target managers respond to changes in this right. If target managers represent target shareholders, the managers would be more likely to release good news, but I find they
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The Effect of Bond Market Transparency on Bank Loan Contracting J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-08-07 Mahfuz Chy, Hoyoun Kyung
We find that bond issuers receive bank loans with 12% fewer covenants when the secondary corporate bond market becomes more transparent. The treatment effect is more pronounced when bond trades are more informative, when stock prices are less informative, and when the likelihood of future debt-equity agency conflicts is higher. The evidence suggests that bond prices reflect forward-looking information
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Accounting comparability and relative performance evaluation by capital markets J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-08-11 Sang Wu, Wenjie Xue
This paper examines how accounting comparability affects the monitoring role and the risk allocation role of capital markets. We develop the statistical and informational properties of accounting reports under varying degrees of comparability. A perfectly comparable accounting information system enables investors to perfectly infer the difference between any two firms' future cash flows although investors
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The role of corporate social responsibility (CSR) information in supply-chain contracting: Evidence from the expansion of CSR rating coverage J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-08-10 Alper Darendeli, Peter Fiechter, Jörg-Markus Hitz, Nico Lehmann
We examine the effect of CSR information on stakeholder decision-making, specifically on supply-chain contracting. To obtain plausibly exogenous variation in CSR information, we exploit the 2017 expansion of CSR rating coverage from Russell 1000 to Russell 2000 firms (hereafter, “treated firms”) by Thomson Reuters Asset4. Using a difference-in-differences design with the previously covered Russell
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Mandatory disclosure and learning from external market participants: Evidence from the JOBS act J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-08-07 Jedson Pinto
This paper examines whether mandatory disclosure affects the extent to which firms learn from external market participants. Conventional wisdom suggests that mandatory disclosure should increase the total amount of information in financial markets. However, disclosure can also reduce investors' incentives to acquire and produce information. Using the JOBS Act to identify variations in disclosure requirements
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The effect of intermediary coverage on disclosure: Evidence from a randomized field experiment J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-07-29 Andrew Belnap
Intermediaries play a significant role in capital markets by reducing disclosure processing costs to market participants. Yet, due to selection and other empirical challenges, the extent and mechanisms through which intermediaries influence firm disclosure are largely unknown. To address these challenges, I conduct a field experiment that randomizes coverage of a mandatory disclosure by two key in
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Causality redux: The evolution of empirical methods in accounting research and the growth of quasi-experiments J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-07-19 Christopher Armstrong, John D. Kepler, Delphine Samuels, Daniel Taylor
This paper reviews the empirical methods used in the accounting literature to draw causal inferences. Recent years have seen a burgeoning growth in the use of methods that seek to exploit as-if random variation in observational settings—i.e., “quasi-experiments.” We provide a synthesis of the major assumptions of these methods, discuss several practical considerations relevant to the application of
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Hidden Gems: Do market participants respond to performance expectations revealed in compensation disclosures? J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-06-30 C Edward Fee, Zhi Li, Qiyuan Peng
We find that a new compensation disclosure item on expected payouts from performance-based stock grants reveals unique information regarding future firm performance. Extracting inferred performance expectations from the disclosures, we find that firms disclosing the highest expected grant payout significantly outperform in ROA, Q, sales growth, and profit margin over the next two years, while those
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Investor information gathering and the resolution of uncertainty J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-06-28 Jed J. Neilson
Information gathering is an instinctive response to uncertainty, but such efforts may not fully resolve the uncertainty that prompted them. This implies that proxies for investor information gathering may endogenously reflect investor uncertainty, not only before but also after information collection. I find evidence consistent with this pattern using data on public internet access of SEC filings around
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Fixed income conference calls J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-06-10 Gus De Franco, Thomas Shohfi, Da Xu, Zhiwei (Vivi) Zhu
We study the determinants and the informational role of firms' fixed income conference calls, a unique form of voluntary disclosure that deviates from the traditional multi-purpose firm disclosures intended for all stakeholders. We find that fixed income calls are more likely to be held by firms that have more debt, lack credit ratings or have publicly traded equity, are foreign, or are experiencing
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Marijuana liberalization and public finance: A capital market perspective on the passage of medical use laws J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-06-02 Stephanie F. Cheng, Gus De Franco, Pengkai Lin
We find that the staggered passage of state-level laws that legalize marijuana for medical use increases states' borrowing costs by 7–9 basis points. Consistent with economic theory on substance use suggesting that marijuana legalization increases local consumption of the drug (by expanding its availability and reducing its perceived risks), we predict and find that increased consumption represents
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Earnings Virality J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-06-02 Brett Campbell, Michael Drake, Jacob Thornock, Brady Twedt
We examine the determinants and market consequences associated with earnings announcements going viral on social media, a phenomenon we label “earnings virality.” Using a comprehensive panel of historical Twitter data, we find that the typical earnings announcement receives relatively little social media coverage, but others go viral on social media, quickly reaching the feeds of millions of people
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The effect of tick size on managerial learning from stock prices J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-05-27 Mao Ye, Miles Y. Zheng, Wei Zhu
We investigate the effect of tick size, a key feature of market microstructure, on managerial learning from stock prices. Using a randomized controlled tick-size experiment, the 2016 Tick Size Pilot Program, we find that a larger tick size increases a firm's investment sensitivity to stock prices, suggesting that managers glean more new information from stock prices to guide their investment decisions
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Does tax enforcement deter managers' self-dealing? J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-05-11 Benjamin P. Yost, Susan Shu
This study examines the effect of corporate tax enforcement on managerial self-dealing, with a focus on manipulated gifts of insider stock. Prior work suggests that managers employ a variety of manipulative techniques to maximize their personal tax benefits from donating corporate stock, such as strategically timing gifts based on private information and fraudulently backdating gifts to the date with
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Dividend taxes and investment efficiency: Evidence from the 2003 U.S. personal taxation reform J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-05-05 J.B. Chay, Byung-Uk Chong, Hyun Joong Im
We examine the effect of a large dividend tax cut on corporate investment efficiency by exploiting the 2003 personal taxation reform in the U.S. as a quasi-natural experiment. Using a difference-in-differences approach based on the probability that a firm’s marginal investor was an individual investor, we show that the 2003 dividend tax cut significantly improved the investment efficiency of U.S. listed
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Political connections and the SEC confidential treatment process J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-04-30 Anne M. Thompson
SEC confidential treatment (CT) orders are regulatory exemptions that enable firms to redact proprietary information from SEC filings if the disclosure would cause competitive harm and if the information is immaterial to investors. This study examines the role of firms' political connections in the SEC's decisions to approve versus reject CT requests before and after Congressional intervention and
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Signaling private information via accounting system design J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-04-14 Aysa Dordzhieva, Volker Laux, Ronghuo Zheng
Firms that wish to raise capital from external investors can signal favorable private information about their long-term prospects by publicly adopting a liberal accounting system that increases the probability of an overstated financial report. All else equal, the liberal bias deteriorates investors' ability to make efficient investment decisions, which increases the firm's cost of raising capital
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Cross-industry information sharing among colleagues and analyst research J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-04-11 Allen H. Huang, An-Ping Lin, Amy Y. Zang
We identify a specific organizational resource in brokerage houses—information sharing among analyst colleagues who cover economically related industries along a supply chain. After controlling for brokerage selection effects, we show evidence consistent with the benefit of this resource to analyst research performance. Specifically, we find that analysts whose colleagues cover more economically connected
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Insights into auditor public oversight boards: Whether, how, and why they “work” J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-04-11 Michelle Hanlon, Nemit Shroff
We survey 170 inspectors, representing 27% of the inspection staff, from auditor public oversight boards (POBs) in 20 countries to understand whether, how, and why auditors respond to POB oversight. We find that a large majority of inspectors believe that auditors frequently respond to their feedback by changing audit procedures and quality control systems. Inspectors perceive inspections to have broad
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Engagement in earnings conference calls J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-04-06 Kristina M. Rennekamp, Mani Sethuraman, Blake A. Steenhoven
Research on conference calls documents that the question and answer (Q&A) portion is informative to markets. However, prior studies focus on the attributes of the participating individuals, primarily managers and analysts. We instead use the conversation as our unit of analysis, and examine whether conversational engagement between managers and analysts in earnings calls is informative to market participants
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The benefits of transaction-level data: The case of NielsenIQ scanner data J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Ilia D. Dichev, Jingyi Qian
This study explores whether NielsenIQ scanner data from U.S. retailers contain incremental information about the GAAP revenue of corresponding manufacturers. Using retail product/store/week data from 2006 to 2018, we construct a measure of aggregated consumer purchases at the manufacturer/quarter level, and find that it strongly predicts GAAP revenues. In addition, analyst forecasts of revenues have
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Small innovators: No risk, No return J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-03-18 Noah Stoffman, Michael Woeppel, M. Deniz Yavuz
We show that small innovators (i.e., small firms with recent patent grants) earn higher future returns than small non-innovators. However, we find no such innovation premium among large firms. The higher returns are driven by risk, not underreaction to announcements of recent patent grants. We find that being small and innovative interacts with financial constraints to explain the higher returns. These
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Information uncertainty and organizational design J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-03-18 Elia Ferracuti
This paper investigates how information uncertainty, measured through variation in the informativeness of the public information environment, shapes the organizational design choices of firms. I posit that, when faced with higher uncertainty about demand and supply, managers are more likely to establish links to customer/supplier industries through high-level hiring decisions and vertical integration
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The effect of income-shifting aggressiveness on corporate investment J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-03-18 Lisa De Simone, Kenneth J. Klassen, Jeri K. Seidman
We investigate whether international income-shifting aggressiveness affects local investments. Amid heightened scrutiny of international activities by tax authorities, firms can support income-shifting goals by locating investments consistent with reported income. As a consequence, we predict firms that aggressively shift income will make affiliate-level investment decisions less influenced by local
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Economic consequences of managerial compensation contract disclosure J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-02-23 Yan Xiong, Xu Jiang
We analytically study the economic consequences of the disclosure of managerial compensation contracts in a setting where two firms, by designing compensation contracts for their respective managers, compete for a new investment opportunity. Each manager is privately informed about her firm's profitability from this investment. We find that the disclosure leads to firms' emphasizing short-term stock
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Redact to protect? Customers' incentive to protect information and suppliers’ disclosure strategies J. Account. Econ. (IF 7.293) Pub Date : 2022-02-21 Gary Chen, Xiaoli (Shaolee) Tian, Miaomiao Yu
We find that suppliers are more likely to redact mandated disclosures when major customers have proprietary information to protect (in the form of R&D intensity, trade secrets, and nondisclosure agreements), controlling for suppliers' own proprietary cost concerns. Furthermore, the effect on suppliers' redactions is concentrated in subsamples for which customers have greater power, measured by customer