Earnings provide important information for investment decisions. Thus, executives--who are monitored by investors, directors, customers, and suppliers--acting in self-interest and at times for shareholders, have strong incentives to manage earnings. The authors introduce behavioral thresholds for earnings management. A model shows how thresholds induce specific types of earnings management. Empirical explorations identify earnings management to exceed each of three thresholds: report positive profits, sustain recent performance, and meet analysts' expectations. The positive profits threshold proves predominant. The future performance of firms suspect for boosting earnings just across a threshold is poorer than that of control group firms. C...
In a two-period and two-type framework, the market does not know a firm’s economic earnings creation...
This paper investigates why managers meet or slightly beat earnings forecasts by presenting and empi...
This study investigates whether and why corporate managers have incentives to meet or slightly beat ...
[[abstract]]This paper examines whether managers manage earnings to satisfy various earnings thresho...
We measure the frequency and magnitude of earnings management assuming earnings follow a mixed-norma...
Purpose – Previous research has provided mixed evidence on the relative importance of three earnings...
Dividend-paying firms tend to manage earnings upward when their earnings would otherwise fall short ...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to investigate whether earnings management that surpasses a t...
This paper investigates the existence of earnings management behavior among exchange-listed financia...
We propose and empirically test a new hypothesis that managers rationally choose between specific ch...
Thomas (1989) demonstrates that U.S. firms with positive earnings manipulate income by rounding up t...
This paper investigates whether maintaining a reputation for consistently beating analysts’ earnings...
This thesis examines benchmark-driven earnings management from two distinct aspects. Firstly, the au...
General evidence indicates that managers manage earnings at three common earnings thresholds: analys...
<p>This paper examines the role of earnings management for firms that report at least three consecut...
In a two-period and two-type framework, the market does not know a firm’s economic earnings creation...
This paper investigates why managers meet or slightly beat earnings forecasts by presenting and empi...
This study investigates whether and why corporate managers have incentives to meet or slightly beat ...
[[abstract]]This paper examines whether managers manage earnings to satisfy various earnings thresho...
We measure the frequency and magnitude of earnings management assuming earnings follow a mixed-norma...
Purpose – Previous research has provided mixed evidence on the relative importance of three earnings...
Dividend-paying firms tend to manage earnings upward when their earnings would otherwise fall short ...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to investigate whether earnings management that surpasses a t...
This paper investigates the existence of earnings management behavior among exchange-listed financia...
We propose and empirically test a new hypothesis that managers rationally choose between specific ch...
Thomas (1989) demonstrates that U.S. firms with positive earnings manipulate income by rounding up t...
This paper investigates whether maintaining a reputation for consistently beating analysts’ earnings...
This thesis examines benchmark-driven earnings management from two distinct aspects. Firstly, the au...
General evidence indicates that managers manage earnings at three common earnings thresholds: analys...
<p>This paper examines the role of earnings management for firms that report at least three consecut...
In a two-period and two-type framework, the market does not know a firm’s economic earnings creation...
This paper investigates why managers meet or slightly beat earnings forecasts by presenting and empi...
This study investigates whether and why corporate managers have incentives to meet or slightly beat ...