ABSTRACT This study shows that firms collectively incur a cost for managing earnings and analyst expectations to meet earnings forecasts. We compare the coefficient in the regression of abnormal stock returns on earnings surprise (the earnings response coefficient [ERC]) across ranges of earnings surprises. The ERC for earnings surprises in the range [0, 1�] is significantly lower than ERCs for earnings surprises in adjacent ranges for firm-quarters in the early and mid 2000s, but not for those in the 1990s. The results are robust to controlling for the sign of estimated discretionary accruals and the trajectory of analyst earnings forecasts. We further find that investors are right to be skeptical about earnings surprises in the range [0, ...
This paper examines the information contained in analyst forecast revisions following earnings annou...
This paper examines the information contained in analyst forecast revisions following earnings annou...
We measure the market\u27s assessment of the information in a particular earnings surprise by calcul...
This study proposes and tests an alternative to the extant earnings management explanation for zero ...
Prior research attributes zero and small positive earnings surprises to managers’ incentives for ear...
Earnings announcement affects respective firms' share prices based on their performances. Financial ...
none3siThis study examines how the market reacts to earnings surprises with different characteristic...
This study examines how the market reacts to earnings surprises with different characteristics such ...
According to the existing literature, companies manage analysts’ expectations of their future earnin...
This study examines how the market reacts to earnings surprises with different characteristics such ...
According to the existing literature, companies manage analysts’ expectations of their future earnin...
This study identifies the predictors of positive earnings surprises at varying levels of earnings su...
This study examines two plausible explanations for Kasznik and Lev's (1995) counterintuitive finding...
This study identifies the predictors of positive earnings surprises at varying levels of earnings su...
Since 2001, the number of financial statement line items forecasted by analysts and managers that I/...
This paper examines the information contained in analyst forecast revisions following earnings annou...
This paper examines the information contained in analyst forecast revisions following earnings annou...
We measure the market\u27s assessment of the information in a particular earnings surprise by calcul...
This study proposes and tests an alternative to the extant earnings management explanation for zero ...
Prior research attributes zero and small positive earnings surprises to managers’ incentives for ear...
Earnings announcement affects respective firms' share prices based on their performances. Financial ...
none3siThis study examines how the market reacts to earnings surprises with different characteristic...
This study examines how the market reacts to earnings surprises with different characteristics such ...
According to the existing literature, companies manage analysts’ expectations of their future earnin...
This study examines how the market reacts to earnings surprises with different characteristics such ...
According to the existing literature, companies manage analysts’ expectations of their future earnin...
This study identifies the predictors of positive earnings surprises at varying levels of earnings su...
This study examines two plausible explanations for Kasznik and Lev's (1995) counterintuitive finding...
This study identifies the predictors of positive earnings surprises at varying levels of earnings su...
Since 2001, the number of financial statement line items forecasted by analysts and managers that I/...
This paper examines the information contained in analyst forecast revisions following earnings annou...
This paper examines the information contained in analyst forecast revisions following earnings annou...
We measure the market\u27s assessment of the information in a particular earnings surprise by calcul...