Contemporaneous verification of language: evidence from management earnings forecasts

被引:0
作者
Stephen Baginski
Elizabeth Demers
Chong Wang
Julia Yu
机构
[1] University of Georgia,Terry College of Business
[2] University of Virginia,Darden Graduate School of Business
[3] Naval Postgraduate School,Nanyang Business School
[4] Nanyang Technological University,undefined
来源
Review of Accounting Studies | 2016年 / 21卷
关键词
Management forecasts; Linguistic tone; Cheap talk; Management incentives; G14; D82; M41;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Research documents that linguistic tone is incrementally informative about stock returns. What remains a puzzle is the mechanism by which investors can assess its credibility. We examine whether contemporaneous information in management earnings forecasts serves as a timely alternative to ex post verification. We document that ex post verifiable quantitative news in unbundled forecasts, and characteristics of the linguistic tone itself, affect investors’ pricing of tone. Consistent with higher quality signals enhancing the credibility of contemporaneous lower quality signals, we find that quantitative news verifies the associated linguistic tone; when the two signals have the same sign, the price effect of tone is stronger. Furthermore, the pricing attenuation of tone is increasing in the imprecision of the quantitative forecast, suggesting that lower forecast quality compromises the quantitative signal’s credibility enhancement. Managerial incentives to inflate tone lead to the verification effect being greater for optimistic language, while management’s use of hyperbole results in attenuation of the tone’s pricing.
引用
收藏
页码:165 / 197
页数:32
相关论文
共 119 条
  • [1] Aboody D(2000)CEO stock option awards and the timing of corporate voluntary disclosures Journal of Accounting and Economics 29 73-100
  • [2] Kasznik R(2004)Broadcasting opinions with an overconfident sender International Economic Review 45 467-498
  • [3] Admati AR(1984)Corporate managers’ earnings forecasts and symmetrical adjustments of market expectations Journal of Accounting Research 22 425-444
  • [4] Pflederer P(1998)Customer satisfaction and word of mouth Journal of Service Research 1 5-17
  • [5] Ajinkya B(2007)Does earnings guidance affect market returns? The nature and information content of aggregate earnings guidance Journal of Accounting and Economics 44 36-63
  • [6] Gift M(1985)Predisclosure information, firm capitalization, and security price behavior around earnings announcements Journal of Accounting Research 23 21-36
  • [7] Anderson E(1993)The effects of management forecast precision on equity pricing and on the assessment of earnings uncertainty The Accounting Review 68 913-927
  • [8] Anilowski C(1990)The market interpretation of management earnings forecasts as a predictor of subsequent financial analyst forecast revisions The Accounting Review 65 175-190
  • [9] Feng M(1997)Determinants of management forecast precision The Accounting Review 72 303-312
  • [10] Skinner D(2002)The effect of legal environment on voluntary disclosure: Evidence from management earnings forecasts issued in U.S. and Canadian markets The Accounting Review 77 25-50