215 research outputs found

    Do males differ from females in the way they set and meet goals? An analysis of marathon runners

    Get PDF
    We examine strategies adopted by people completing a well-defined but difficult task: running a marathon. We find strong evidence that males relative to females focus on, and care more about, beating a round number time (e.g., 4:00 hours). Our evidence suggests that setting a round number goal helps males perform better in the race. We find that these males are more likely to run at constant pace (the optimal way to run a marathon) and have more energy to speed up (“kick”) towards the end of the race. In contrast, females are less likely to set round number times as goals, and run more conservatively at the start, pace themselves better throughout the race, and finish with a stronger kick, irrespective of whether their finish time is close to a round number. Our results also suggest that males benefit more from planning than do females, since we find that less experienced males are more likely to start the race too aggressively and slow down considerably (“bonk”) towards the end of the race. Our results have implications for organizations because they suggest that the sexes can subconsciously differ in the strategies they adopt to complete a task and the goals they use to evaluate their performance

    Understanding Earnings Quality: A Review of the Proxies, Their Determinants and Their Consequences

    Get PDF
    Researchers have used various measures as indications of “earnings quality” including persistence, accruals, smoothness, timeliness, loss avoidance, investor responsiveness, and external indicators such as restatements and SEC enforcement releases. For each measure, we discuss causes of variation in the measure as well as consequences. We reach no single conclusion on what earnings quality is because “quality” is contingent on the decision context. We also point out that the “quality” of earnings is a function of the firm’s fundamental performance. The contribution of a firm’s fundamental performance to its earnings quality is suggested as one area for future work

    Why Are Earnings Kinky? An Examination of the Earnings Management Explanation

    Full text link
    Prior research has documented a “kink” in the earnings distribution: too few firms report small losses, too many firms report small profits. We investigate whether boosting of discretionary accruals to report a small profit is a reasonable explanation for this “kink.” Overall, we are unable to confirm that boosting of discretionary accruals is the key driver of the kink. We caution the use of the ratio of small profit firms to small loss firms as a measure of earnings management. We investigate and discuss a number of alternative explanations for the kink.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/47741/1/11142_2004_Article_5127187.pd

    Implied Equity Duration: A New Measure of Equity Risk

    Full text link
    Duration is an important and well-established risk characteristic for fixed income securities. We use recent developments in financial statement analysis research to construct a measure of duration for equity securities. We find that the standard empirical predictions and results for fixed income securities extend to equity securities. We show that stock price volatility and stock beta are both positively correlated with equity duration. Moreover, estimates of common shocks to expected equity returns extracted using our measure of equity duration capture a strong common factor in stock returns. Additional analysis shows that the book-to-market ratio provides a crude measure of equity duration and that our more refined measure of equity duration subsumes the Fama and French (1993) book-to-market factor in stock returns. Our research shows how structured financial statement analysis can be used to construct superior measures of equity security risk.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/47748/1/11142_2004_Article_5272372.pd

    Have Financial Markets Become More Informative?

    Get PDF
    The finance industry has grown. Financial markets have become more liquid. Information technology has improved. But have prices become more informative? Using stock and bond prices to forecast earnings, we find that the information content of market prices has not increased since 1960. The magnitude of earnings surprises, however, has increased. A baseline model predicts that as the efficiency of information production increases, prices become more disperse and covary more strongly with future earnings. The forecastable component of earnings improves capital allocation and serves as a direct measure of welfare. We find that this measure has remained stable. A model with endogenous information acquisition predicts that an increase in fundamental uncertainty also increases informativeness as the incentive to produce information grows. We find that uncertainty has indeed increased outside of the S&P 500, but price informativeness has not

    The Impact of Brand Quality on Shareholder Wealth

    Get PDF
    This study examines the impact of brand quality on three components of shareholder wealth: stock returns, systematic risk, and idiosyncratic risk. The study finds that brand quality enhances shareholder wealth insofar as unanticipated changes in brand quality are positively associated with stock returns and negatively related to changes in idiosyncratic risk. However, unanticipated changes in brand quality can also erode shareholder wealth because they have a positive association with changes in systematic risk. The study introduces a contingency theory view to the marketing-finance interface by analyzing the moderating role of two factors that are widely followed by investors. The results show an unanticipated increase (decrease) in current-period earnings enhances (depletes) the positive impact of unanticipated changes in brand quality on stock returns and mitigates (enhances) their deleterious effects on changes in systematic risk. Similarly, brand quality is more valuable for firms facing increasing competition (i.e., unanticipated decreases in industry concentration). The results are robust to endogeneity concerns and across alternative models. The authors conclude by discussing the nuanced implications of their findings for shareholder wealth, reporting brand quality to investors, and its use in employee evaluation

    Short-sellers, fundamental analysis, and stock returns

    Full text link
    http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/35551/2/b2036010.0001.001.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/35551/1/b2036010.0001.001.tx

    The Quality of accruals and earnings : the role of accrual estimation errors

    Full text link
    http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/35550/2/b2037816.0001.001.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/35550/1/b2037816.0001.001.tx
    corecore