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Capital Markets Research in Accounting

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Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

Capital markets research in


accounting$
S.P. Kothari*
Sloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge,
MA 02142, USA
Received 22 November 1999; received in revised form 8 March 2001

Abstract

I review empirical research on the relation between capital markets and financial
statements. The principal sources of demand for capital markets research in accounting
are fundamental analysis and valuation, tests of market efficiency, and the role of
accounting numbers in contracts and the political process. The capital markets research
topics of current interest to researchers include tests of market efficiency with respect to
accounting information, fundamental analysis, and value relevance of financial
reporting. Evidence from research on these topics is likely to be helpful in capital
market investment decisions, accounting standard setting, and corporate financial
disclosure decisions. r 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

JEL classification: F00; F30; G15; M41

Keywords: Capital markets; Financial reporting; Fundamental analysis; Valuation; Market


efficiency

$
I thank Jeff Abarbanell, Anwer Ahmed, Sudipta Basu, Patty Dechow, Dan Gode, Wayne
Guay, Charles Lee, Bob Lipe, Mike Mikhail, Jowell Sabino, Jake Thomas, Charles Wasley, and
Tzachi Zach for helpful comments and discussions. I am especially indebted to Doug Skinner and
Jerry Zimmerman, editors, for detailed comments on several drafts of the paper. I acknowledge
financial support from the New Economy Value Research Lab at the MIT Sloan School of
Management.
*Tel.: +1-617-253-0994; fax: +1-617-253-0603.
E-mail address: kothari@mit.edu (S.P. Kothari).

0165-4101/01/$ - see front matter r 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
PII: S 0 1 6 5 - 4 1 0 1 ( 0 1 ) 0 0 0 3 0 - 1
106 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

1. Introduction

1.1. Objective of the review article

My assignment is to review research on the relation between capital markets


and financial statements. This is a broad area of research that originated with
the seminal publication of Ball and Brown (1968). The literature has grown
rapidly with over 1000 published papers in leading academic accounting and
finance journals in the past three decades. The approach I adopt for the review
involves a survey of the literature using an economics-based framework. I
begin with a discussion of the demand for and supply of research on the
relation between financial information and capital markets. This is the
organizing framework of my discussion of various areas within capital markets
research.
An important objective of the review is to produce a pedagogically valuable
document. Toward this end, the review extends at least two previous
comprehensive surveys of the capital markets research in accounting by Lev
and Ohlson (1982) and Bernard (1989). Because they provide in-depth
summaries of research in the 1970s and 1980s, the bulk of the research
examined in my study is from the late 1980s and 1990s. In addition to offering a
fairly detailed summary of research in the past 10–15 years, I discuss the
genesis of important ideas in the literature and the concurrent developments
that stimulated many of the ideas. I also critically evaluate the research findings
and research designs employed in past research. The main objective is to offer
competing hypotheses and explanations for the observed findings. This
naturally leads to unresolved issues and directions for future research noted
throughout the review. I hope doctoral students (and their instructors) find the
study useful in preparing themselves for successful careers in research.
I review almost exclusively empirical capital markets research. However,
empirical research is (or should be) informed by theory, since interpretation of
empirical analysis is impossible without theoretical guidance. Therefore, I refer
to the underlying theory and alternative hypotheses that bear on the analysis,
some of which Verrecchia (2001) reviews.
While I attempt to be thorough, my own tastes and interests as well as my
differential expertise in various areas within capital markets research influence
the review’s contents. In addition, within the empirical capital markets area,
there are at least three topics that are examined extensively elsewhere.
Holthausen and Watts (2001) present a critical assessment of the research on
value relevance in the context of standard setting. Healy and Palepu (2001)
evaluate empirical research on corporate disclosure and Shackelford and
Shevlin (2001) examine tax-related capital markets research. Accordingly, I do
not discuss the capital markets research in the above three areas, although I
make references to them.
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 107

1.2. Summary

Capital markets research in accounting includes several topics, including


research on earnings response coefficients and properties of analysts’ forecasts,
fundamental analysis and valuation research, and market efficiency tests.
Instead of summarizing each topic, I comment on areas of current interest in
capital markets research and offer thoughts on how academics can prepare
themselves for producing high impact research.
The capital market research topics of primary interest to researchers
currently appear to be tests of market efficiency with respect to accounting
information (e.g., accounting methods and accruals), fundamental analysis and
accounting-based valuation, and value relevance of financial reporting (see
Holthausen and Watts, 2001). The mounting evidence of apparent market
inefficiency documented in the financial economics and accounting literature
has fueled accounting researchers’ interest in fundamental analysis, valuation,
and tests of market efficiency. Evidence of market inefficiency has created an
entirely new area of research examining long-horizon stock-price performance
following accounting events. This is in sharp contrast to the boom in short-
window event studies and studies of economic consequences of standard setting
of the 1970s and 1980s. Future work on tests of market efficiency with respect
to accounting information will be fruitful if it recognizes that (i) deficient
research design choices can create the false appearance of market inefficiency;
and (ii) advocates of market inefficiency should propose robust hypotheses and
tests to differentiate their behavioral-finance theories from the efficient market
hypothesis that does not rely on irrational behavior.
I expect capital markets research on issues surrounding market efficiency,
fundamental analysis, and valuation to continue. It is worthwhile thinking
about how best to prepare for such research. A historical perspective provides
helpful guidance. Capital markets research in accounting began in the late
1960s soon after the development of the efficient markets hypothesis and event
study methodology (see Section 3) at the University of Chicago. Many of the
early capital markets investigators in accounting also came from Chicago and
were typically trained in finance and economics. I believe future successful
capital markets researchers will also be similarly well trained with a solid
grounding in economics-based and behavioral theories of market inefficiency,
which have begun to mushroom in finance and economics. This will prepare
accounting academics to make a meaningful contribution, not simply within
the field of accounting, but in finance and economics as well.

1.3. Outline of the review

Section 2 presents a discussion of the sources of demand for capital markets


research in accounting. I review early capital markets research in Section 3,
108 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

primarily with a pedagogical motivation. It contains an overview of the state of


accounting research in the era prior to the Ball and Brown (1968) and Beaver
(1968) and the developments in finance and economics in the mid-1960s that
facilitated capital markets research in accounting. I discuss much of the capital
markets research in the past two decades in Section 4. Section 4 is split into
four subsections. Section 4.1 examines methodological research. Section 4.2
focuses on research evaluating alternative performance measures. Funda-
mental analysis research in accounting is the topic of Section 4.3 and tests of
market efficiency in accounting are critically evaluated in Section 4.4. Capital
markets research on standard setting is also a capital markets research topic,
but I refer the reader to the Holthausen and Watts (2001) review. Section 5
presents a summary and conclusions.

2. Demand for capital markets research in accounting

A large fraction of published research in leading academic accounting


journals examines the relation between financial statement information and
capital markets, referred to as capital markets research. This voluminous
published research is an indication of the demand for capital markets
research.1 There are at least four sources of the demand for capital markets
research in accounting that explain its popularity: (i) fundamental analysis and
valuation; (ii) tests of capital market efficiency; (iii) role of accounting in
contracts and in the political process; and (iv) disclosure regulation. I discuss
the four sources of demand for capital markets research below, and list the
types of research studies I subsequently summarize in the review. While I
believe the four sources account for a large fraction of the demand for capital
markets research in accounting, these sources are neither mutually exclusive
nor collectively exhaustive.

2.1. Fundamental analysis and valuation

Shareholders, investors, and lenders have an obvious interest in the value of


a firm. In an efficient market, firm value is defined as the present value of
expected future net cash flows, discounted at the appropriate risk-adjusted rate

1
I do not examine the decline in the cost of doing capital market research as an explanation for
the explosive growth in the supply of capital market research over the past three decades. The cost
has declined with the low-cost availability of computing power, statistical packages, and machine-
readable databases such as security price data from the Center for Research in Security Prices
(CRSP), financial statement data from Standard & Poor’s Compustat, and analysts’ forecast data
from Institutional Brokers Estimate System (IBES).
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 109

of return. A firm’s current performance as summarized in its financial


statements is an important, but not the only input to the market’s assessment
of the firm’s future net cash flows and thus into the firm’s market valuation.
This is consistent with the Financial Accounting Standard Board’s (FASB’s)
conceptual framework that financial statements should help investors and
creditors in ‘‘assessing the amounts, timing, and uncertainty’’ of future cash
flows (FASB, 1978). Therefore, a temporal association between current
financial performance and future cash flows, as well as a contemporaneous
association between financial performance and security prices or price changes
is expected. An important goal of capital markets research is to provide
evidence on these relations.
The principal focus of fundamental analysis is on valuation aimed at
identifying mispriced securities. This has been popular at least since Graham
and Dodd published their book Security Analysis in 1934.2 A large fraction of
the nearly $5 trillion currently invested in US mutual funds is actively
managed, with fundamental analysis as the guiding principle of most mutual
fund managers. Fundamental analysis entails the use of information in current
and past financial statements, in conjunction with industry and macroeco-
nomic data to arrive at a firm’s intrinsic value. A difference between the current
price and the intrinsic value is an indication of the expected rewards for
investing in the security. Capital markets research on fundamental analysis has
become extremely popular in recent years in part because of mounting evidence
in the financial economics literature against the efficient markets hypothesis.
The belief that ‘‘price convergence to value is a much slower process than
prior evidence suggests’’ (Frankel and Lee, 1998, p. 315) has acquired currency
among leading academics, spurring research on fundamental analysis.
Capital markets research on fundamental analysis examines whether it
successfully identifies mispriced securities. Fundamental analysis research thus
cannot be disentangled from capital markets research on testing market
efficiency.
The research on valuation and fundamental analysis that I review includes
valuation models, such as those presented in Fama and Miller (1972, Chapter
2), Beaver et al. (1980), Christie (1987), Kormendi and Lipe (1987), Kothari
and Zimmerman (1995), Ohlson (1995), and Feltham and Ohlson (1995). I then
examine recent empirical applications of the valuation models like Dechow
et al. (1999) and Frankel and Lee (1998). Finally, I discuss studies that employ
fundamental analysis to forecast earnings and future stock returns (i.e., a test
of market efficiency). Examples include Ou and Penman (1989a, b), Stober
(1992), Lev and Thiagarajan (1993), Abarbanell and Bushee (1997, 1998), and
Piotroski (2000).

2
Recent editions of the book are titled ‘‘Graham and Dodd’s Security Analysis’’ by Cottle et al.
(1988).
110 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

2.2. Tests of market efficiency

Fama (1970, 1991) defines an efficient market as one in which ‘‘security


prices fully reflect all available information’’. Whether security markets are
informationally efficient is of great interest to investors, managers, standard
setters, and other market participants. The interest stems from the fact that
security prices determine the allocation of wealth among firms and individuals.
The security prices themselves are influenced by financial information, which
explains academic and practicing accountants and standard setters’ interest in
market efficiency research.
Market efficiency has important implications for the accounting profession.
For example, rewards from fundamental analysis would diminish in an efficient
market. A switch from one accounting method to another without a direct cash
flow effect, a signaling effect, or incentive consequences does not affect security
prices in an efficient market. Choice between disclosure in footnotes and
recognition in financial statements (e.g., accounting for employee stock
options) is less contentious from the perspective of its effect on security prices
in an efficient market. Naturally, the opposite would be true in all of the above
examples if markets were not efficient. Therefore, there is a demand for
empirical research on market efficiency.
There is a huge literature testing market efficiency in finance, economics, and
accounting. I concentrate on the literature in accounting. The accounting
literature draws inferences about market efficiency from two types of tests:
short- and long-horizon event studies and cross-sectional tests of return
predictability or the anomalies literature. Event studies, which constitute the
bulk of the literature, include the post-earnings-announcement drift literature
(e.g., Ball and Brown, 1968; Foster et al., 1984; Bernard and Thomas, 1989,
1990; Ball and Bartov, 1996; Kraft, 1999); market efficiency with respect to
accounting methods and method changes and research on functional
fixation (e.g., Ball, 1972; Kaplan and Roll, 1972; Dharan and Lev, 1993;
Hand, 1990; Ball and Kothari, 1991); and accrual management and analyst
forecast optimism and long-term returns to initial public offerings and
seasoned equities (e.g., Teoh et al., 1998a, b; Dechow et al., 1999; Kothari
et al., 1999b).
Cross-sectional tests of return predictability, or the anomalies literature,
examine whether the cross section of returns on portfolios formed periodically
using a specific trading rule is consistent with a model of expected returns like
the CAPM. The trading rules used have been either univariate indicators like
earnings yield, or multivariate indicators employing a fundamental analysis of
accounting ratios. Examples of research using univariate indicators are tests of
the market’s (mis)pricing of earnings and cash flow yield (e.g., Basu, 1977,
1983; Lakonishok et al., 1994), accounting accruals (e.g., Sloan, 1996; Xie,
1997; Collins and Hribar, 2000a, b), and analysts’ forecasts (e.g., LaPorta,
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 111

1996; Dechow and Sloan, 1997). Examples of tests using multivariate


indicators to earn long-horizon abnormal returns include ratio-based funda-
mental analysis (e.g., Ou and Penman, 1989a, b; Greig, 1992; Holthausen and
Larcker, 1992; Abarbanell and Bushee, 1997, 1998), and fundamental value
strategies (e.g., Frankel and Lee, 1998).

2.3. Role of accounting in contracts and in the political process

Positive accounting theory (see Watts and Zimmerman, 1986) predicts that
the use of accounting numbers in compensation and debt contracts and in the
political process affects a firm’s accounting choices. A large body of literature
in accounting tests predictions of positive accounting theory. Many of these
tests entail the use of capital market data. For example, tests of the economic
consequences of accounting examine stock price reactions to new accounting
standards, and study whether cross-sectional variations in these stock price
reactions are related to financial variables that proxy for contracting and/or
political costs. To perform powerful tests of positive accounting theory and to
ameliorate the effects of correlated omitted variables on the tests, researchers
attempt to control for the effect of financial information on security prices that
is unrelated to the positive accounting theory.3 This creates a demand for
capital markets research that aids researchers in designing more powerful
stock-price-based tests of the positive accounting theory.
I review a large body of methodological capital markets research that
facilitates research on positive accounting theory. The methodological research
includes the earnings response coefficient literature (e.g., Kormendi and Lipe,
1987; Easton and Zmijewski, 1989; Collins and Kothari, 1989); research on the
properties of time series, management, and analysts’ forecasts of earnings (e.g.,
Ball and Watts, 1972; Foster, 1977; Brown and Rozeff, 1978; Patell, 1976;
Penman, 1980; Waymire, 1984); research about problems in drawing statistical
inferences (e.g., Collins and Dent, 1984; Bernard, 1987); and discretionary
accrual models (e.g., Healy, 1985; Jones, 1991; Dechow et al., 1995; Guay et al.,
1996).

2.4. Disclosure regulation

In the US, the FASB, with authority delegated by the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC), is charged with issuing standards that govern
3
Watts (1992) makes a symmetric argument in the context of tests of the relation between
financial statement numbers and stock prices. He contends that in order to perform powerful tests
of competing theories about the relation between accounting numbers and stock prices, it behooves
researchers to include positive accounting theory-based variables in the tests to control for their
effects that are correlated with the capital market relations being tested.
112 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

the disclosure of financial information by publicly traded firms. Capital


markets research can help ascertain whether FASB’s stated objectives are
served by the standards it has issued, either singly or collectively. For example,
do financial statement numbers prepared according to a new standard convey
new information to the capital markets? Are financial statement numbers
prepared according to a new standard more highly associated with
contemporaneous stock returns and prices? What are the economic con-
sequences of the issuance of a new disclosure standard? The nature and extent
of standard setting is also likely influenced by standard setters’ perception of
whether security markets are informationally efficient. Thus, standard
setters have an interest in the capital markets research on tests of market
efficiency.
Internationally, standard setters presumably seek evidence from capital
markets research. The rapid globalization of capital, product, and labor
markets has created a strong demand for international accounting standards in
recent years. Perhaps the most important issue facing practitioners, and
standard setters is whether there should be a uniform set of accounting
standards or whether there should be diversity. If standards were to be
uniform, should US generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) be the
standard? Or should standards be developed internationally? Or should
standards differ across nations, depending on differences in legal, political, and
economic environments? Are capital markets in other countries as (in)efficient
as they are in the US, which could affect the nature of international accounting
standards? Interest in these and related issues has precipitated a demand for
capital markets research using international accounting and capital markets
data.
Holthausen and Watts (2001) review and analyze the capital markets
research on issues surrounding disclosure regulation, so I refrain from
reviewing this area of capital markets research in detail.

3. Early capital markets research

Ball and Brown (1968) and Beaver (1968) heralded empirical capital markets
research as it is now known. This section describes the state of accounting
theory and thought that preceded the positive-economics-based empirical
capital markets research of the late 1960s. Concurrent developments in
economics and finance constituted the theoretical and methodological impetus
to the early capital markets research in accounting. In my opinion, this
historical detour exploring the forces that shaped early capital markets
research has positive pedagogical externalities, particularly for guiding new
researchers. Seasoned researchers can skip over portions of this section without
a loss of continuity.
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 113

More importantly, another reason for a historical review is that capital


markets research in accounting today appears to be in a similar state as
accounting theory was prior to 1968. The efficient markets hypothesis and
positive economics, as well as other related developments, facilitated the birth
of capital markets research in the 1960s. In contrast, theoretical models of
inefficient capital markets, research methodology, and evidence of apparent
market inefficiency are the catalysts for a large portion of the capital markets
research in accounting today.

3.1. The state of accounting theory in the early 1960s

Until the mid-1960s, accounting theory was generally normative. Account-


ing theorists advanced their accounting policy recommendations on the basis
of an assumed set of accounting objectives. Hendriksen (1965, p. 2) defines ‘‘a
most appropriate theory’’ as one that ‘‘supports the development of procedures
and techniques that best fulfill the objectives of accounting’’.4 He adds, ‘‘One
of the first steps in the development of accounting theory, therefore, is a clear
statement of the objectives of accounting.’’ Thus, theory development
depended on the objectives assumed by a researcher, and theory evaluation
was based on logic and deductive reasoning. There was little emphasis on the
empirical validity of the theory’s predictions.
Since the theories were logically consistent, the basis for selecting one
accounting policy over another was reduced to choosing among alternative
objectives of accounting. However, since individuals disagreed on the
objectives of accounting, there was no consensus on the optimal set of
accounting policies. This led to skepticism about the usefulness of accounting
income reported in the financial statements. Hendriksen (1965, p. 97) observes
that ‘‘already there are rumblings that the income statement will see its demise
in the near future unless drastic changes are made to improve the story it tells’’.
For a variety of reasons, many doubted whether historical cost accounting
numbers conveyed useful information about, or an accurate assessment of, a
firm’s financial health.

3.2. Concurrent developments that facilitated capital markets research in


accounting

While accounting theorists and practitioners held a dim view of whether


historical cost accounting numbers accurately reflected a firm’s financial health,
scientific evidence on the issue did not exist. Providing empirical evidence to
4
I use the discussion of accounting theory in Hendrikson’s book as a reasonable description of
the state of accounting theory at the time. That description is similar to the one in Ball and Brown
(1968) and Watts and Zimmerman (1986, Chapter 1).
114 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

ascertain whether accounting numbers contained or conveyed information


about a firm’s financial performance was the major motivation that led to the
research of Ball and Brown (1968) and Beaver (1968). There were three major
concurrent developments in finance and economics that forged the way for the
seminal research by both Ball and Brown (1968) and Beaver (1968): (i) positive
economics theory, (ii) the efficient markets hypothesis and the capital asset
pricing model (CAPM) and (iii) the event study of Fama et al. (1969).

3.2.1. Positive economics


Friedman (1953) was perhaps the most prominent among those who were
instrumental in making positive, as opposed to normative, science the
mainstream research methodology in economics, finance, and accounting.
Following Keynes’ (1891) definition of positive science as ‘‘a body of
systematized knowledge concerning what is’’, Friedman (1953, p. 7) describes
positive science as ‘‘the development of a ‘theory’ or ‘hypothesis’ that yields
valid and meaningful (i.e., not truistic) predictions about phenomena yet to be
observed’’. Most accounting research since Ball and Brown (1968) and Beaver
(1968) is positive and the role of accounting theory is no longer normative.
Watts and Zimmerman (1986, p. 2) state: ‘‘The objective of accounting theory
is to explain and predict accounting practice.’’ This is noteworthy departure
from the widespread practice of normative accounting theory.

3.2.2. Efficient markets hypothesis and the capital asset pricing model (CAPM)
Building on past theoretical and empirical work, Fama (1965) introduced,
and subsequently made major contributions to the conceptual refinement and
empirical testing of the efficient markets hypothesis. Fama (1965, p. 4) notes
‘‘In an efficient market, on the average, competition’’ among rational, profit-
maximizing participants ‘‘will cause the full effects of new information on
intrinsic values to be reflected ‘instantaneously’ in actual prices’’.
The maintained hypothesis of market efficiency opened the doors for positive
capital markets research in accounting. Ball and Brown (1968, p. 160) assert
that capital market efficiency provides ‘‘justification for selecting the behavior
of security prices as an operational test of usefulness’’ of information in
financial statements. Beaver (1968) offers a similar argument. Unlike previous
normative research on accounting theories and optimal accounting policies,
positive capital markets research began using changes in security prices as an
objective, external outcome to infer whether information in accounting reports
is useful to market participants.
Sharpe (1964) and Lintner (1965) developed the capital asset pricing model,
CAPM. The CAPM predicts that a security’s expected rate of return is
increasing in the covariance risk of its cash flows, which is the covariance of a
security’s expected return with the expected return on the market portfolio.
Therefore, a portion of the cross-sectional variation in security returns is due to
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 115

differences in the covariance risks of the securities. This risk-related variation


in returns is generally not of interest to researchers who focus on firm-specific
accounting information and its relation to the firm-specific component of the
stock return. Therefore, the CAPM, along with the efficient market hypothesis,
greatly facilitated the estimation of the firm-specific return component.
The use of the firm-specific component alone enhances the power of the
tests of information content of accounting reports (Brown and Warner, 1980,
1985).

3.2.3. Event study of Fama et al. (1969)


Fama et al. (1969) conducted the first event study in financial economics.
Event studies are joint tests of market efficiency and the model of expected
rates of return used in estimating abnormal returns. Fama et al.’s research
design innovation permits researchers to align sample firms in event time and
to then examine their security price performance before, during, and after
economic events such as stock splits (Fama et al., 1969) and earnings
announcements (Ball and Brown, 1968; Beaver, 1968).

3.2.4. Positive accounting theory development: a short detour


Circumstances similar to those that facilitated the Ball and Brown (1968)
study also contributed to Watts and Zimmerman’s positive accounting theory
that revolutionized the accounting literature in the late 1970s (see Watts and
Zimmerman, 1978, 1979, 1983, 1986). Watts and Zimmerman capitalized on
the concurrent developments in finance and economics to explain some of the
puzzles facing accounting researchers and practitioners. The impetus to Watts
and Zimmerman’s work was the seminal work of Jensen and Meckling (1976)
and Ross (1977) that altered the course of the corporate finance literature.
Jensen and Meckling (1976) articulate the implications of the agency problem
between a firm’s shareholders (principal) and the management (agent) and
between shareholders and bondholders in an informationally efficient
capital market. The agency problem arises in part because of the imperfect
observability of managerial effort and costly contracting. This nexus of
contracts view of a corporation enabled Watts and Zimmerman to
develop hypotheses as to why there should be predictable variation in
how firms account for their economic activities as well as why accounting
standards would matter, even if capital markets were informationally
efficient.
Watts and Zimmerman’s political cost hypothesis extends the economics
literature on regulation in a political process, as distinct from a market process
(see Olson, 1971; Stigler, 1971; Posner, 1974; McCraw, 1975; Peltzman, 1976;
Watts and Zimmerman, 1986, Chapter 10). Thus, the insight that led to the
development of Watts and Zimmerman’s positive accounting theory involves
the accounting implications of the concurrent theoretical developments in
116 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

finance and economics. Watts and Zimmerman then tailored those theories to
explain accounting phenomena.

3.3. Association and event studies

Ball and Brown (1968) and Beaver (1968) are the pioneering studies in
capital markets research in accounting. Both perform an event study and Ball
and Brown also conduct an association study. Both types of studies are now
common in the literature.
In an event study, one infers whether an event, such as an earnings
announcement, conveys new information to market participants as reflected in
changes in the level or variability of security prices or trading volume over a
short time period around the event (see Collins and Kothari, 1989, p. 144;
Watts and Zimmerman, 1986, Chapter 3). If the level or variability of prices
changes around the event date, then the conclusion is that the accounting event
conveys new information about the amount, timing, and/or uncertainty of
future cash flows that revised the market’s previous expectations. The degree of
confidence in this conclusion critically hinges on whether the events are
dispersed in calendar time and whether there are any confounding events (e.g.,
a simultaneous dividend and earnings announcement) co-occurring with the
event of interest to the researcher. As noted earlier, the maintained
hypothesis in an event study is that capital markets are informationally
efficient in the sense that security prices are quick to reflect the newly arrived
information. Because event studies test for the arrival of information through
an accounting event, they are also referred to as tests of information content in
the capital markets literature in accounting. Besides Ball and Brown (1968)
and Beaver (1968), other examples of event studies include Foster (1977),
Wilson (1986), Ball and Kothari (1991), Amir and Lev (1996), and Vincent
(1999).
An association study tests for a positive correlation between an accounting
performance measure (e.g., earnings or cash flow from operations) and stock
returns, both measured over relatively long, contemporaneous time periods,
e.g., one year. Since market participants have access to many more timely
sources of information about a firm’s cash flow generating ability, association
studies do not presume that accounting reports are the only source of
information to market participants. Therefore, no causal connection between
accounting information and security price movements is inferred in an
association study. The objective is to test whether and how quickly accounting
measures capture changes in the information set that is reflected in security
returns over a given period. In addition to Ball and Brown (1968), other
pertinent studies include Beaver et al. (1980), Rayburn (1986), Collins and
Kothari (1989), Livnat and Zarowin (1990), Easton and Harris (1991), Easton
et al. (1992), Dechow (1994), and Dhaliwal et al. (1999).
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 117

3.4. Early evidence from event studies and association studies

3.4.1. Event study evidence


Ball and Brown (1968) and Beaver (1968) provide compelling evidence
that there is information content in accounting earnings announcements.
Ball and Brown correlate the sign of the abnormal stock return in the month
of an earnings announcement with the sign of the earnings change over
that firm’s previous year’s earnings. They find a significantly positive
correlation.
The maintained hypothesis underlying the Ball and Brown test is that the
earnings expectation model is well specified in providing a clean measure of
earnings surprise. That is, at least a portion of the earnings increase
experienced by the firms classified as ‘‘good news’’ firms was a favorable
surprise to the market, which led to increased security prices. Thus, the
strength of the association between earnings announcement period abnormal
return and the earnings surprise is a function of both the information content
of earnings and the quality of the earnings expectation model employed. Ball
and Brown provide evidence using two earnings expectation models: a simple
random walk model and a market model in earnings.
Beaver (1968) circumvents the problem of specifying an earnings expectation
model by examining the variability of stock returns and trading volume around
earnings announcements. Beaver hypothesizes that the earnings announcement
period is characterized by an increased flow of information compared to a non-
earnings announcement period. He uses return volatility to infer the flow of
information. The evidence supports Beaver’s hypothesis.
Beaver also tests for the flow of information by comparing trading volume in
the earnings announcement periods to that in the non-announcement periods.
The notion here is that market participants have heterogeneous expectations
about a forthcoming earnings announcement. Earnings announcements resolve
some of the uncertainty and thus narrow the heterogeneity of beliefs, but in the
process contribute to increased trading among the market participants who
might have taken positions based on their pre-earnings announcement period
heterogeneous expectations.5

3.4.2. Association study evidence


The Ball and Brown evidence clearly demonstrates that accounting earnings
contemporaneously capture a portion of the information set that is reflected in
security returns. The evidence also suggests that competing sources of
information (including quarterly earnings) preempt the information in annual
5
Recent models of investors’ belief revision show that increased heterogeneity is also possible as
a consequence of news events such as an earnings announcement (see Harris and Raviv, 1993;
Kandel and Pearson, 1995; Bamber et al., 1999).
118 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

earnings by about 85%. In this sense, annual accounting numbers are not a
particularly timely source of information to the capital markets.
The use of annual earnings to infer earnings’ timeliness weakens the case in
favor of earnings’ timeliness because one of the sources of other information to
the capital markets is quarterly earnings (see Foster, 1977). Even so, earnings
are unlikely to be a particularly timely source of information. Because
accounting earnings measurement rules emphasize transaction-based revenue
recognition, compared to the stock market’s focus on current and expected
future net revenues, earnings’ lack of timeliness is not surprising (e.g., Beaver
et al., 1980; Collins et al., 1994). In other words, stock prices lead accounting
earnings in terms of reflecting new information.
In addition to studying the association and information content of
accounting earnings with respect to security returns, Ball and Brown also test
for market efficiency by examining whether the market’s reaction to good and
bad news earnings announcement is quick and unbiased. They find preliminary
evidence of a post-earnings announcement drift in that the market’s adjustment
to bad news in particular takes several months. This suggests market
underreaction and subsequent gradual adjustment to the information in
earnings. While Ball and Brown provide preliminary evidence of a post-
earnings announcement drift, the anomaly literature on the drift took a solid
root with the works of Jones and Litzenberger (1970), Litzenberger et al.
(1971), Foster et al. (1984), and Bernard and Thomas (1989, 1990).6 This
research is reviewed in Section 4 under tests of market efficiency.
Ball and Brown also compare the informativeness of earnings and cash flows
to test whether the accrual process makes earnings more informative than cash
flows. Their evidence suggests the annual abnormal return adjustment is
greater for earnings changes than for cash flow changes, consistent with the
accrual process making earnings more informative. Following Ball and Brown,
a long stream of research examines the relative informativeness of earnings and
cash flows.7 This research is reviewed in Section 4.

3.5. Beyond the early evidence

Ball and Brown (1968) and Beaver (1968) spawned an industry of capital
markets research, which is systematically reviewed in the next two sections.
Some of the research following Ball and Brown and Beaver replicates their
results in different settings, e.g., in different countries, using interim earnings
compared to annual earnings, using shorter earnings announcement periods,
and by examining both the sign and magnitude compared to only the sign in
6
See Ball (1978) for an early survey of this literature.
7
Examples include Rayburn (1986), Bowen et al. (1987), Wilson (1986, 1987), Bernard and
Stober (1989), Livnat and Zarowin (1990), and Dechow (1994).
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 119

Ball and Brown. I review this and subsequent capital markets research in
Sections 4 and 5.

3.5.1. Market efficiency and evaluation of accounting standards


The early evidence of earnings’ association with security returns and
evidence of capital market efficiency in finance and economics led some
accounting researchers to draw standard-setting implications.8 For example,
Beaver (1972) in the Report of the American Accounting Association Committee
on Research Methodology in Accounting, suggests that the association of
accounting numbers with security returns can be used to rank order alternative
accounting methods as a means of determining the accounting method that
should become a standard. The report states that the ‘‘method which is more
highly associated with security pricesy ought to be the method reported in the
financial statements’’ (p. 428), subject to considerations of competing sources
of information and costs.9
The initial high expectations of the usefulness of capital markets research in
guiding accounting standard setters to the socially most desirable accounting
methods proved ephemeral. Gonedes and Dopuch (1974) and others quickly
pointed out weaknesses (e.g., the free rider problem of non-purchasers’ access
to accounting information) in using the strength of the association with
security returns as a determining criterion for the social desirability of an
accounting standard. The debate, however, continues.
Many advocate changes in financial accounting standards because of the
perception that current GAAP earnings have low correlation with security
prices (e.g., Lev, 1989). They propose alternative accounting methods that
arguably would improve the correlation with stock returns (e.g., Lev and
Zarowin, 1999). Others contend that the correlation between accounting
numbers and security returns would be a function of the objectives of financial
statements. There is a demand for objective, verifiable information that is
useful for contracting and performance evaluation purposes (Watts and
Zimmerman, 1986). Such demand skews the accounting process in the
direction of presenting historical information summarizing the effects of
actual, rather than expected, transactions, i.e., the application of the revenue
recognition principle. In contrast, security price changes primarily reflect
revisions in expectations of future profitability. Consequently, the contem-
poraneous return–earnings association is expected to be small (Kothari, 1992).
Commenting on standard setting and the research on the association between
security returns and financial information, Lee (1999, p. 13) concludes: ‘‘Until
accounting regulators decide that reported earnings should include anticipated
profits from future exchanges (that is, until we abandon the ‘‘revenue
8
Holthausen and Watts (2001) discuss this topic in detail.
9
Also see Beaver and Dukes (1972) and Gonedes (1972).
120 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

recognition’’ principle), it is difficult to see how higher correlation with


contemporaneous returns should have any standard setting implications.’’10
Notwithstanding the conceptual debate over the appropriateness of the
correlation with security returns as a criterion for evaluating financial
accounting standards, the criterion continues to be used frequently, albeit
with some cautionary language. For example, Dechow (1994) uses correlation
with stock returns to compare earnings and cash flows as measures of a firm’s
periodic performance and Ayers (1998) examines whether deferred tax
accounting under SFAS No. 109 provides incremental value relevance over
the previous standard for income taxes. One of the objectives of financial
reporting, as stated in FASB (1978, paragraph 47), is ‘‘Financial reporting
should provide information to help present and potential investors and
creditors and other users in assessing the amounts, timing, and uncertainty’’ of
prospective cash flows. This serves as a major motivation for researchers to use
correlation with stock returns as a criterion for evaluating alternative
accounting methods and performance measures.

3.5.2. Role of maintained hypothesis


A maintained hypothesis in research that uses correlation with stock returns
as a criterion for evaluating accounting methods is that capital markets are
efficient. However, in recent years, market efficiency has been subjected to
significant empirical assault. There is mounting evidence of capital market
anomalies, which suggests that capital markets might be inefficient. Section 4
examines some of this evidence in the context of the accounting capital
markets literature. My limited objective here is to comment on the
implications for capital markets research that assumes capital market
inefficiency.
The appealing feature of market efficiency as a maintained hypothesis is that
it often facilitates the specification of a relation between accounting
information and security prices under the null hypothesis. For example,
neither systematic positive nor negative abnormal returns are predicted in
periods following the announcement of an accounting method change.
Systematic evidence of non-zero abnormal returns would refute market
efficiency.
If market inefficiency is the maintained hypothesis, then the relation between
security prices and financial information under the null hypothesis is difficult to
specify a priori. The challenge facing researchers is to place more structure on
the form of the relations under market inefficiency (Fama, 1998). A wide range
of relations is feasible under market inefficiency. It is important to develop
refutable hypotheses on the basis of behavioral theories of inefficient financial
10
Barclay et al. (1999) make a similar point using managerial performance measurement as the
motivation.
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 121

markets and to perform tests that discriminate between efficient and inefficient
market hypotheses.11 This is the essence of the positive theory of economics
that has guided much capital markets research for the past three decades.
Accountants armed with the knowledge of institutional details about
accounting and the use of accounting information by financial analysts have
a comparative advantage in developing theories and in designing more
powerful tests of market efficiency and/or specific forms of market inefficiency.

3.6. Summary

The early event studies and association studies were seminal in several
respects. First, they refuted the then prevailing concern that the historical cost
earnings measurement process produces meaningless numbers. Second, these
studies introduced positive empirical methodology and event study research
design to the accounting literature. The early capital markets research amply
demonstrated the benefits of incorporating the developments from, and
contributing to, the economics and finance literature. Finally, the studies
helped dispel the notion that accounting is a monopoly source of information
to the capital markets. The early evidence clearly establishes that accounting is
not a particularly timely source of information affecting security prices, with
many competing sources of information pre-empting earnings information.
This has accounting standard-setting implications.

4. Capital markets research in the 1980s and 1990s

Early capital markets research demonstrates that accounting reports have


information content and that financial statement numbers reflect information
that influences security prices, although not on a timely basis. The decades
following the early research witnessed an explosive growth in capital markets
research. I categorize the demand of this research into five main areas: (i)
methodological capital markets research, (ii) evaluation of alternative
accounting performance measures, (iii) valuation and fundamental analysis
research, (iv) tests of market efficiency, and (v) value relevance of disclosures
according to various financial accounting standards and economic conse-
quences of new accounting standards. (Since Holthausen and Watts (2001) and
Healy and Palepu (2001) examine item (v) in great detail, I do not discuss this
item.)
Considerable overlap exists among the first four areas of research, but they
have sufficiently different motivations and they strike me as quite distinct from
11
See Barberis et al. (1998), Daniel et al. (1998), and Hong and Stein (1999) for behavioral
models that produce predictable security return patterns consistent with market inefficiency.
122 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

each other. The next four subsections consider the above four areas of
research.

4.1. Methodological capital markets research

Capital markets research seeks to answer a wide range of questions. A


sample of the questions examined in previous research includes:
* Do current cost earnings have incremental information content over
historical cost earnings?
* Do differences in corporate governance structures affect the degree of
information asymmetry in capital markets and, in turn, influence the timing
and strength of the relation between security returns and earnings
information?
* Does managerial ownership affect the informativeness of accounting
numbers because of the separation of corporate ownership and control?
* Does the perceived quality of an auditor affect the relation between
corporate earnings and security returns?
* How does the reporting of transitory gain as part of ordinary income and
transitory loss as an extraordinary item affect prices?
* How do we test for the capital market effects of accounting method changes?
* Are disclosures about other post-retirement employee benefits (OPEB) value
relevant?
* Does an economic value added (EVAs) performance measure correlate
more highly with stock returns and prices than historical cost accounting
earnings?
* What would be the consequence of the Securities and Exchange Commis-
sion discontinuing the requirement of reconciliation between the US GAAP
and the foreign- or the International Accounting Standards-GAAP for the
non-US firms seeking to list their shares on the US exchanges and raise
capital in the US?
* Would financial statements be more informative about current economic
income (i.e., change in the market value) if GAAP were changed to permit
managers to capitalize R&D outlays?
To answer these questions, a researcher must control for the ‘‘normal’’
relation between financial statement information and security returns to isolate
the treatment effect of interest. The normal relation obviously varies with the
research setting, and could mean any relation other than the treatment effect.
For example, in examining the effect of managerial ownership on the
informativeness of accounting numbers, the investigator must control for the
influence of growth opportunities on earnings’ informativeness because
managerial ownership percentage is likely to be correlated with growth
opportunities, which affect earnings’ informativeness. This effect of growth
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 123

might be unrelated to the potential agency effect of ownership control on


earnings’ informativeness.
I review methodological research in four sub-sections.

(i) Earnings response coefficients research (Section 4.1.1),


(ii) Properties of time series, management, and analysts’ forecasts of earnings
and earnings growth rates (Section 4.1.2).
(iii) Methodological issues in drawing statistical inferences from capital
markets research (Section 4.1.3).
(iv) Models of discretionary and non-discretionary accruals (Section 4.1.4).
Additional details on this issue are deferred to Section 4.4 on tests of
market efficiency because in the capital markets context, the models of
discretionary and non-discretionary earnings are frequently used in tests of
market efficiency.

4.1.1. Earnings response coefficients research


4.1.1.1. Motivation for research on earnings response coefficients. Earnings
response coefficient research is motivated by its potential use in valuation and
fundamental analysis. As seen below, a valuation model underlies earnings
response coefficient estimation. Another important methodological motivation
for research on earnings response coefficients is to facilitate the design of more
powerful tests of the contracting and political cost hypotheses or voluntary
disclosure or signaling hypotheses in accounting.

4.1.1.2. Intuition for earnings response coefficients. Kormendi and Lipe (1987)
is an early paper on earnings response coefficients (also see Miller and Rock,
1985). They build on the accounting association studies literature12 and the
macroeconomics literature on the permanent income hypothesis, which relates
the time-series properties of consumption and income.13 Kormendi and Lipe
estimate the magnitude of the relation between stock returns and earnings, the
earnings response coefficient, and test whether firm-specific estimates of
earnings response coefficients cross-sectionally exhibit a positive correlation
with the time-series properties of the firms’ earnings. Thus, earnings response
coefficients are a mapping of earnings’ time-series properties and discount rates
into changes in equity market values. For example, if earnings’ time-series
properties are such that earnings innovations are permanent, then assuming a

12
See, for example, Ball and Brown (1968), Foster (1977), Beaver et al. (1979, 1980, 1987), and
Watts and Zimmerman (1986, Chapter 2).
13
See, for example, Hall (1978), Flavin (1981), and Kormendi and LaHaye (1986). The
permanent income hypothesis is developed in Modigliani and Brumberg (1954), Friedman (1957),
and Ando and Modigliani (1963).
124 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

one-to-one relation between earnings innovations and net cash flow innova-
tions, the earnings response coefficient is the present value of the perpetuity of
the earnings innovation calculated by discounting the perpetuity at the risk-
adjusted rate of return on equity. The present value of a $1 permanent
innovation in annual earnings is ð1 þ 1=rÞ; where r is the annual risk-adjusted
discount rate for equity.
To predict earnings response coefficient magnitudes, a researcher thus
requires a valuation model (e.g., dividend-discounting model), revisions in
forecasts of future earnings based on current earnings information, and a
discount rate. Time-series properties of earnings play a role in parsimoniously
describing the revisions in earnings forecasts based on current earnings, but a
rigorous theory for the time-series properties does not exist. The most
promising area of research in the earnings response coefficient literature is to
relate time-series properties of earnings to economic determinants like
competition, technology, innovation, effectiveness of corporate governance,
incentive compensation policies, etc. (see below). I believe further refinements
in the valuation models and more accurate estimates of discount rates are likely
to be only incrementally fruitful in furthering our understanding of the return–
earnings relation or the earnings response coefficients.

4.1.1.3. Economic determinants of earnings response coefficients. Early research


by Kormendi and Lipe (1987), Easton and Zmijewski (1989), and Collins and
Kothari (1989) identifies four economic determinants of earnings response
coefficients. These studies all begin with the discounted net cash flow valuation
model that is standard in the finance and economics literature. To link earnings
to security returns, a one-to-one link between revisions in the market’s
expectations of earnings and net cash flows is assumed. The price change in
response to a $1 earnings innovation is the $1 innovation plus the discounted
present value of the revision in expectations of all future periods’ earnings. The
four determinants of this price change or the earnings response coefficient are:
persistence, risk, growth, and interest rate. I discuss each briefly.
Kormendi and Lipe (1987) and Easton and Zmijewski (1989) show that the
greater the impact of an earnings innovation on market participants’
expectations of future earnings, i.e., the more persistent the time-series
property of earnings, the larger the price change or the earnings response
coefficients. Collins and Kothari (1989, Table 1) relate the earnings response
coefficient to a number of commonly assumed ARIMA time-series properties
of earnings, including the random walk, moving average, and autoregressive
properties.
Easton and Zmijewski (1989) explain why risk negatively affects earnings
response coefficient. Risk here refers to the systematic (or non-diversifiable or
the covariance) component of the equity cash flows’ volatility. Single- or
multi-beta versions of the CAPM imply that the equity discount rate increases
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 125

in the equity cash flows’ systematic risk.14 Thus, greater risk implies a larger
discount rate, which reduces the discounted present value of the revisions in
expected future earnings, i.e., the earnings response coefficient.
Collins and Kothari (1989) predict a positive marginal effect of a firm’s
growth opportunities on the earnings response coefficient. Growth here refers
either to existing projects or to opportunities to invest in new projects that are
expected to yield rates of return that exceed the risk-adjusted rate of return, r,
commensurate with the systematic risk of the project’s cash flows (see Fama
and Miller, 1972, Chapter 2). A firm’s ability to earn above-normal rates of
return on its current or future investments does not contradict capital market
efficiency. It only means that the firm has monopoly power in the product
markets and is able to earn (quasi) rents for a finite period. Stated differently,
entry or exit in the product markets often does not instantaneously eliminate
firms’ ability to earn super-normal rates of return.15 To the extent current
earnings are informative about the firm’s growth opportunities, the price
change is expected to be large. Collins and Kothari (1989, pp. 149–150) argue
that the price reaction would be greater than that implied by the time-series
persistence of earnings in part because persistence estimates from historical
data are likely to be ‘‘deficient in accurately reflecting current growth
opportunities’’.
Finally, Collins and Kothari (1989) predict a negative temporal relation
between earnings response coefficients and the risk-free rate of interest. The
logic here is straightforward. The discount rate, r, at any point in time is the
sum of the risk-free rate of return at the time and a risk premium. If the risk-
free rate of interest rises, then ceteris paribus the discounted present value of
the revisions in expectations of future earnings innovations falls, inducing a
negative temporal association between interest rate levels and earnings
response coefficients.16

14
The Sharpe (1964) and Lintner (1965) CAPM is a single-beta CAPM whereas the Fama and
French (1993) three-factor model that includes size and book-to-market factors beyond the market
factor or the Carhart (1997) four-factor model that adds the momentum factor to the Fama–
French three-factor model is an example of multi-beta CAPM. The state-of-the-art in the finance
literature is to use either the three- or the four-factor CAPM models (see Fama and French, 1997).
15
In contrast, in an efficient capital market, prices adjust immediately to reflect changing
expectations about a firm’s earnings generating ability such that at any point in time an investor
can only expect a normal rate of return on an investment in any stock.
16
The argument ignores the possibility that changes in interest are simply changes in expected
inflation and that the firm passes on the changes in inflation to its customers in the form of higher
prices. In this case earnings response coefficients would be unrelated to interest rate changes. The
negative relation between interest rates and earnings response coefficient implicitly assumes either
interest rate changes covary positively with changes in real interest rates or inflation negatively
impacts stock prices because of unanticipated inflation’s negative effects on economic activity (see
Fama and Schwert, 1977; Fama, 1981). See further discussion in Section 4.1.1.4.
126 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

4.1.1.4. Assessment of the early evidence on earnings response coefficients. E-


vidence in Kormendi and Lipe (1987), Easton and Zmijewski (1989), and
Collins and Kothari (1989) indicates a statistically significant effect of the
cross-sectional and temporal determinants on estimated earnings response
coefficients. Numerous studies replicate these results and it has become an
industry standard now in the capital markets literature to control for the
effects of persistence, risk, and growth and focus on the incremental effect
of a treatment variable, like ownership control, on earnings response
coefficients.
Notwithstanding the success and impact of the earnings response coefficients
literature, there are at least three criticisms of this research. First, the research
on persistence and its relation to earnings response coefficients tends to be
statistical in nature. I will revisit this issue in the context of research on time-
series properties of earnings. Research on earnings response coefficients can be
enriched by focusing on the economic determinants of the time series
properties of firms’ earnings. There is some work in this area. Ahmed (1994)
draws on the works of Lev (1974, 1983), Thomadakis (1976), Lindenberg
and Ross (1981), and Mandelker and Rhee (1984) on the relation between
the potential to earn economic rents on a firm’s assets and the degree of
competition in the firm’s industry and the firm’s cost structure. Ahmed
(1994, p. 379) then proposes and reports consistent evidence that ‘‘if
accounting earnings reflect information about future economic rents
generated by firms’ assets-in-place, earnings response coefficients will vary
inversely with competition and directly with the ratio of fixed costs to variable
costs’’.17
Anthony and Ramesh (1992) draw on research on the relation between a
firm’s life cycle and business strategy18 to explain cross-sectional variation
in earnings response coefficients. They argue that depending on a firm’s
stage in its life cycle, financial statement information is differentially
informative about a firm’s cash flow generating ability such that
earnings response coefficients are predictably related to a firm’s stage in its
life cycle.19

17
Also see Biddle and Seow (1991) for evidence on cross-industry variation in earnings response
coefficients and Baginski et al. (1999) for the impact of economic characteristics on earnings
persistence measures.
18
See Porter (1980), and Spence (1977, 1979, 1981), Wernerfelt (1985), Richardson and Gordon
(1980), and Rappaport (1981).
19
There is another stream of literature that derives predictions about the behavior of earnings
response coefficients as a function of a firm’s life cycle that is rooted in the resolution of uncertainty
about the parameter values of the time-series properties of earnings (see Rao, 1989; Lang, 1991).
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 127

More recently, Ohlson (1995) introduces a mean-reverting process for


residual income, which is in the spirit of competition eroding a firm’s sustained
ability to earn supernormal earnings. By modeling residual income, instead of
total income or changes in income, as an autoregressive process, Ohlson (1995)
better captures the intuitive economic effect of product-market competition.
Dechow et al. (1999) report evidence that supports the economic modeling of
residual income as an autoregressive process. However, they are able to achieve
‘‘only modest improvements in explanatory power’’ over research using simpler
earnings capitalization and dividend-discounting models (Dechow et al.,
1999, p. 3).
The second weakness of the literature linking earnings response coefficients
to persistence is that it tends to present in-sample evidence. For example,
Kormendi and Lipe (1987) and Collins and Kothari (1989) estimate time-series
parameters and perform cross-sectional tests of a relation between the
persistence parameters and earnings response coefficients over the same sample
period.20 The absence of a predictive test weakens our confidence in the results,
even though the arguments and hypothesis are intuitive.21 Dechow et al. (1999)
confirm that the autoregressive properties at the industry level have predictive
power with respect to the persistence of earnings in future, but their
objective was not to explicitly link persistence to earnings response
coefficients.
The third criticism of the literature on earnings response coefficient
determinants, made in Watts (1992, p. 238), is that it does ‘‘not control for
differences in accounting earnings’ ability to proxy for current and future cash
flows and differences in accounting methods. This raises the distinct possibility
of a correlated omitted variables problem’’. Salamon and Kopel (1991)
independently make a similar point. The potential for a correlated omitted
variables problem arises in part because of the following two possibilities. (i)
There is an association between the earnings response coefficients’ economic
determinants like risk and accounting method choice. (ii) Accounting method

20
Ali and Zarowin (1992) point out that tests that ignore the effect of transitory earnings
components (see below) in relating earnings response coefficients to persistence overstate the
importance of persistence. However, even after controlling for this overstatement, they report that
persistence is a significant determinant of earnings response coefficients.
21
One weakness of Lys et al. (1998) is precisely that their use of in-sample time-series properties
does not permit them to convincingly discriminate between the following two hypotheses: The
effect of time-series properties on earnings response coefficients and the Easton et al. (1992)
argument that temporal aggregation of earnings is key to a strong relation between returns and
earnings. I will revisit this issue below in the context of research on reasons why estimated earnings
response coefficients are too small compared to their predicted values under certain modeling
assumptions.
128 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

choice is correlated with earnings’ predictive power with respect to future cash
flows. In general, the literature on economic determinants of earnings response
coefficients has not adequately explored economic variables based on the
contracting or accounting-choice theory literature as earnings response
coefficients’ determinants.22 This is worthy of future investigation.23

4.1.1.5. Competing hypotheses to explain why estimated earnings response


coefficients are ‘‘too small’’. Empirical estimates of earnings response
coefficient magnitudes range from 1 to 3 (see, for example, Kormendi and
Lipe, 1987; Easton and Zmijewski, 1989). Assuming a random walk as a
reasonable description of the time series of annual earnings (see Ball and Watts
(1972), and further discussion below) and a discount rate of about 10%, the
expected magnitude of the earnings response coefficient is about 11 ð¼ 1 þ 1=rÞ:
Using price–earnings multiple as a reasonable estimate of the earnings response
coefficient, one expects a magnitude of 8–20 depending on the time period
examined. The relatively small magnitude of the earnings response coefficient
compared to its predicted value motivated researchers to advance several
hypotheses and explanations that I survey below. Interestingly, however, the
inquiry into a comparison of the estimated with the predicted magnitude of the
earnings response coefficients predates the earnings response coefficient
literature that began with Kormendi and Lipe (1987).
Beaver et al. (1980) attempt to explain the difference between predicted and
estimated values of earnings response coefficients by introducing three inter-
related ideas: prices lead earnings (see below), a true-earnings-plus-noise model
of accounting earnings, and a reverse-regression econometric research design.
Another notable attempt appears in Easton and Harris (1991). Assuming the
book value of equity is a noisy proxy for the market value of equity and
assuming clean surplus, they argue that earnings measures the change in the
market value of equity. They therefore argue that earnings-deflated-by-price
should be used in addition to earnings-change-deflated-by-price in explaining
22
Exceptions include studies like Baber et al. (1996, 1998) that examine the interplay between
earnings response coefficients, investment opportunities, and management compensation.
23
There is another criticism that concerns the temporal relation between interest rates and
earnings response coefficients. Is the interest rate a causal determinant of earnings response
coefficients? A large component of nominal interest rates is inflation. Finance and macroeconomics
literature documents that shocks to inflation are negatively related to both shocks to real economic
activity and stock market returns (see Fama and Schwert, 1977; Fama, 1981). Furthermore, real
economic activity and business outlook are negatively related to expected rates of returns on stocks
and bonds (see Fama and French, 1988, 1989; Balvers et al., 1990; Chen, 1991). This means interest
rates might be positively related to the risk premium, as suggested in the literature on time-varying
expected rates of returns. Thus, the interest rate effect on earnings response coefficients (or on
price–earnings multiples) might be via time-varying risk premium (i.e., expected return on the
market minus the risk-free rate of interest). Interest rate itself might not be the causal factor
contributing to its negative relation with earnings response coefficients.
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 129

earnings. If the balance sheet perspective in Easton and Harris (1991) is


adopted, the predicted coefficient on earnings is one, which implies earnings are
entirely transitory. Since earnings are highly persistent, I find the Easton and
Harris (1991) explanation unsatisfactory even though their evidence clearly
shows that earnings-deflated-by-price significantly explains stock returns
beyond the earnings-change variable. Kothari (1992) and Ohlson and Shroff
(1992) offer alternative, earnings-expectations-based motivation for using
earnings-deflated-by-price to explain stock returns in a return–earnings
regression. In recent years, researchers estimating a return–earnings regression
frequently use earnings-deflated-by-price variable to explain stock returns.
However, the estimated earnings response coefficient is far from its predicted
value of approximately the price–earnings multiple.
At least four hypotheses explain the observed low magnitudes of earnings
response coefficients: (a) prices lead earnings; (b) inefficient capital markets; (c)
noise in earnings and deficient GAAP; and (d) transitory earnings.24 I discuss
these below along with a summary of the evidence.
(a) Prices lead earnings: An important paper, Beaver et al. (1980), develops
the idea that the information set reflected in prices is richer than that in
contemporaneous accounting earnings.25 In an efficient market, price changes
instantaneously incorporate the present value of the revisions in the market’s
expectations of future net cash flows. In contrast, because of the revenue
realization and expense matching principles that are fundamental to the
earnings determination process (Statement of Financial Accounting Concepts
No. 6, paras 78–79), accounting earnings incorporate the information reflected
in price changes systematically with a lag. This is parsimoniously referred to as
‘‘prices lead earnings’’.
One implication of prices leading earnings is that even though annual
earnings’ time-series properties are reasonably described as a random walk and
thus successive earnings changes are unpredictable using the information in
past time series of earnings, the information set reflected in prices contains
24
An additional reason is whether the earnings response coefficient is estimated using time-series
data for an individual firm or it is estimated for classes of securities in the cross section. Teets and
Wasley (1996) offer compelling evidence that firm-specific, time-series estimates of earnings
response coefficients are substantially larger than those estimated using cross-sectional regression.
They show that the firm-specific estimates are on average larger because of a strong negative cross-
sectional correlation between the variance of unexpected earnings and firm-specific earnings
response coefficient. In pooled estimations, the high, unexpected earnings variance firms receive
disproportionate weight, which causes the estimated coefficient to be smaller than the average of the
firm-specific estimates.
25
Following Beaver et al. (1980), there has been voluminous work on the implications of prices
leading earnings. A selected list of papers includes Collins et al. (1987, 1994), Beaver et al. (1987,
1997), Freeman (1987), Collins and Kothari (1989), Kothari (1992), Kothari and Sloan (1992),
Easton et al. (1992), Warfield and Wild (1992), Jacobson and Aaker (1993), Basu (1997), Ball et al.
(2000), and Liu and Thomas (2000).
130 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

information about future earnings changes. That is, from the perspective of the
market, successive annual earnings changes are not unpredictable. The
econometric consequence of prices leading earnings is that when returns are
correlated with contemporaneous earnings changes, only a portion of the
earnings change is a surprise to the market. In an efficient market, the
anticipated portion of the earnings change is irrelevant in explaining
contemporaneous returns. This informationally irrelevant portion of earnings
change contributes to a standard errors-in-variables problem (see Maddala,
1988, Chapter 11; or Greene, 1997, Chapter 9), which biases downward the
earnings response coefficient and reduces the explanatory power of the return–
earnings regression. Thus, simply correlating earnings change with returns or
failure to use an accurate proxy for unexpected earnings in the presence of
prices leading earnings is hypothesized as a reason for earnings response
coefficients that are ‘‘too small’’.
(b) Inefficient capital markets: If the market fails to correctly appreciate the
implications of a current earnings surprise in revising its expectations of future
earnings, the price change associated with earnings change will be too small.
There is a large body of evidence that suggests that the stock market underreacts
to earnings information and recognizes the full impact of the earnings
information only gradually over time (see references in Section 3 on the post-
earnings-announcement-drift literature and further discussion in this section
under ‘‘tests of market efficiency’’). Smaller-than-predicted values of earnings
response coefficients are consistent with capital market inefficiency. Such an
interpretation, however, should be tempered unless there is a logically consistent
inefficient markets theory that predicts underreaction to earnings information.
The reason is that overreaction is just as easily possible as underreaction in an
inefficient market without a theory that predicts a particular phenomenon.
(c) Noise in earnings and deficient GAAP: The ‘‘noise in earnings’’ argument
gained currency among accounting academics with Beaver et al. (1980).26
While Beaver et al. elegantly express the intuition for why prices lead earnings,
their modeling (Beaver et al., 1980, Section 2) relies on defining accounting
earnings as the sum of ‘‘true earnings’’ plus value-irrelevant noise or a garbling
component that is uncorrelated with stock prices (i.e., value) or returns in all
periods.27 This assumption enables Beaver et al. to present one model of the
prices-lead-earnings phenomenon.28 However, the ‘‘true-earnings-plus-noise’’

26
Also see Choi and Salamon (1990), Collins and Salatka (1993), Ramesh and Thiagarajan
(1993), and Ramakrishnan and Thomas (1998).
27
However, there is no consensus in the literature on the definition of value-irrelevant noise (see,
for example, Ramakrishnan and Thomas, 1998).
28
For a different approach, see Fama (1990), Lipe (1990), Ohlson and Shroff (1992), Kothari
(1992), Kothari and Sloan (1992), and Kothari and Zimmerman (1995). This alternative approach
is described below.
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 131

view of earnings suggests that accountants garble an otherwise ‘‘true earnings’’


signal about firm value. This seems counterintuitive and contrary to evidence
on at least two grounds. First, there is evidence that accounting accruals are
informative (see Rayburn (1986) and Dechow (1994), and many other studies).
Second, regardless of whether accruals are informative or not, it seems unlikely
that earnings without the accruals would be ‘‘true income’’. There is no
economic intuition to suggest that an earnings-measurement process that
emphasizes a transaction-based approach would generate ‘‘true income’’,
which means earnings that capture all of the information that is in economic
income, i.e., the change in equity market capitalization. In fact, the thesis of
Beaver et al. is that prices lead earnings, which means the information set in
price changes is richer than that in accounting earnings.
The deficient-GAAP argument takes the major objective of financial
reporting to be ‘‘the prediction of future investor cash flows or stock returns’’
(Lev, 1989, p. 157). Proponents of the deficient-GAAP argument therefore use
the return–earnings correlation as a measure of GAAP’s success in fulfilling its
objective. The maintained hypothesis is that capital markets are information-
ally efficient and the major objectives of financial reporting are generally
inferred from the FASB’s Statements of Financial Accounting Concepts.29 In a
series of papers, Baruch Lev with numerous coauthors has been probably the
single biggest advocate of the ‘‘deficient GAAP’’ argument. Deficient GAAP is
claimed to produce ‘‘low quality’’ earnings that exhibit only weak correlation
with security returns. Lev (1989, p. 155) states, ‘‘While misspecification of the
return/earnings relation or the existence of investor irrationality (‘‘noise
trading’’) may contribute to the weak association between earnings and stock
returns, the possibility that the fault lies with the low quality (information
content) of reported earnings looms large.’’
Lev expresses similar views in the context of accounting for research and
development in Amir and Lev (1996), Aboody and Lev (1998), Lev and
Sougiannis (1996), Lev and Zarowin (1999), and other papers. In addition,
there is a vast positive empirical literature that examines the ‘‘deficient-GAAP’’
argument without making regulatory prescriptions. See, for example, Abraham
and Sidhu (1998), Healy et al. (1999), and Kothari et al. (1999a) in the context
of the capitalization versus expensing of research and development costs and
Bryant (1999) in the context of full cost versus successful efforts method of
accounting for oil-and-gas drilling costs.

29
For example, Lev (1989) quotes the following from FASB (1978, para. 43): ‘‘The primary focus
of financial reporting is information about an enterprise’s performance provided by measures of
earnings and its components. Investors, creditors, and others who are concerned with assessing the
prospects for enterprise net cash flows are especially interested in that information. Their interest in
an enterprise’s future cash flows and its ability to generate favorable cash flows leads primarily to
an interest in information about its earningsy’’
132 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

The noise-in-earnings and deficient-GAAP arguments have similar con-


sequences for the return–earnings correlation. Both weaken the contempora-
neous return–earnings correlation and bias downward the earnings response
coefficient (see, for example, Beaver et al., 1980; Lev, 1989, the appendix; or
Kothari, 1992). However, I believe the two arguments are different. Noise is
defined as a variable that is uncorrelated with the information in security
returns in all time periods, i.e., current, past, and future. Deficient GAAP, in
contrast, is simply another form of the prices-lead-earnings argument, except
that there is a normative undercurrent in the deficient-GAAP argument. The
deficient-GAAP argument posits that financial statements are slow to
incorporate the information that is reflected in contemporaneous market
values. In addition, it assumes that the greater the contemporaneous
correlation of earnings with returns, the more desirable the GAAP that
produces that earnings number. Unfortunately, the reasons why maximizing
the earnings’ correlation with stock returns is desirable are not well articulated
or proven logically. I have touched upon this issue earlier, but a detailed
treatment appears in Holthausen and Watts (2001).
(d) Transitory earnings: Although annual earnings are frequently assumed to
follow a random walk, the presence of transitory components in earnings has
long been recognized in the literature (see, for example, Brooks and
Buckmaster, 1976; Ou and Penman, 1989a, b). There are several reasons for
transitory earnings. First, certain business activities, like asset sales, produce
one-time gains and losses.30
Second, because of information asymmetry between managers and outsiders,
and because of potential litigation, there is a demand for and supply of
conservative accounting numbers. Following Basu (1997, p. 4), I define
conservatism as asymmetry in the speed with which accounting numbers reflect
economic gains and losses or earnings reflecting ‘‘bad news more quickly than
good news’’ (also see Ball et al., 2000). Both information asymmetry and threat
of litigation motivate management to disclose bad news on a more timely basis
than good news. That is, the accounting recognition criteria have evolved to be
less stringent for losses than gains such that anticipated losses, but not gains,
are recognized more often and more quickly. Recognition of anticipated losses
approximates recognition of the market value effect (loss) as it becomes known,
so losses, like market value changes, are transitory. Hayn (1995) points out
another reason for losses being transitory. She argues that the firm has an
abandonment put option to discontinue the loss-making (or below-market
return generating) operation and recoup the book value of the firm’s assets. So,

30
Here I assume the business events that produce one-time gains or losses are exogenous. If
managerial incentives were to influence the occurrence of these events, then they would be
endogenous (e.g., Bartov, 1991). The endogenous nature of these events is more realistic and it is
discussed below.
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 133

only firms expecting to improve will continue operations, which means


observed losses would be temporary. The loss-making firms’ ability to recoup
the book value through abandonment and adaptation enhances the book
value’s association with prices in periods when a firm is performing poorly
(also see Berger et al., 1996; Burgstahler and Dichev, 1997; Barth et al., 1998;
Wysocki, 1999).31 The role of book values in valuation and book values’
association with prices are topics examined in some detail below and especially
in Holthausen and Watts (2001).
Finally, managerial motivations rooted in agency theory might contribute to
transitory gains and losses. For example, Healy (1985) hypothesizes and
documents evidence that for compensation considerations in a costly
contracting setting, managers might generate discretionary accruals that
reduce high levels of non-discretionary earnings or might take a ‘‘big bath’’
to report an extreme loss.32 The ‘‘big bath’’ discretionary accrual behavior is
also observed with incoming CEOs (see Pourciau, 1993; Murphy and
Zimmerman, 1993). The discretionary component of the accruals is likely to
be transitory and in fact mean reverting because accruals (eventually) reverse.
4.1.1.5.1. Econometric consequence of transitory earnings. The econometric
consequence of transitory earnings components is straightforward. A simple
model based on the analysis in Kothari and Zimmerman (1995, Section 5.1)
illustrates the effect. I follow it up with a richer analysis later. Suppose
X t ¼ xt þ u t ;
where Xt is the reported earnings consisting of a random walk component,
xt ¼ xt1 þ et ; et BNð0; s2e Þ and a transitory component, ut BNð0; s2u Þ: Also
assume that the market has no information beyond the time-series property of
earnings and that et and ut are uncorrelated. The earnings response coefficient
on the transitory component is one. However, the market’s sensitivity to the
random walk component, i.e., the permanent component of earnings is b ¼
ð1 þ 1=rÞ or the average price–earnings multiple. Using the beginning-of-
period-price, Pt1 ; as the deflator, a return–earnings regression
Rt ¼ g0 þ g1 Xt =Pt1 þ errort

31
The abandonment option is a real option. See Robichek and Van Horne (1967) for an early
treatment of the abandonment option in capital budgeting. The role of real options in valuation is
an important emerging area in financial economics. See Pindyck (1988), Dixit and Pindyck (1994),
Abel et al. (1996), and Trigeorgis (1996) for excellent treatments of real options and valuation. The
idea of real options has recently been applied in accounting (see Wysocki, 1999), but I believe there
is far more potential still to be realized.
32
Following Healy (1985), there is a huge literature that examines compensation-motivated
earnings management. This and other earnings management literature on the debt and political cost
hypotheses that originated with the positive accounting theory (see Watts and Zimmerman, 1978,
1986) is beyond the scope of my review, unless it is related to the capital markets research.
134 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

will yield a slope coefficient that falls between 1 and b because Xt is the sum of
two independent variables with two different slope coefficients relating them to
the dependent variable. Disentangling the two components and including those
separately in the regression will yield coefficients on the two components that
are closer to their predicted values (see, for example, Collins et al., 1997) and
the model’s explanatory power will increase. The g1 coefficient’s magnitude
depends on the relative magnitudes of the variances of the random walk and
transitory components of earnings. If k is defined as s2e =ðs2e þ s2u Þ; then g1 is
expected to equal kðb  1Þ þ 1: Thus, if there are no transitory earnings, then
k ¼ 1 and the slope coefficient will be b: Alternatively, at the other extreme, if
there are no permanent earnings, then k ¼ 0 and the slope coefficient will be 1
on entirely transitory earnings.
As the assumption of zero correlation between the random walk and
transitory earnings components is relaxed, the predictions about g1 ’s
magnitudes naturally change. Economic hypotheses about managers’ incen-
tives would generally suggest a non-zero correlation between the two
components, which complicates the analysis.
4.1.1.5.2. Evidence on transitory earnings’ effect on earnings response
coefficients. There is an extensive literature documenting a smaller earnings
response coefficient on transitory earnings as proxied for by non-recurring
items reported in the financial statements (see, for example, Collins et al., 1997;
Hayn, 1995; Elliott and Hanna, 1996; Ramakrishnan and Thomas, 1998;
Abarbanell and Lehavy, 2000a). In addition, there is a literature on non-
linearities in the return–earnings relation that attempts to infer transitory
earnings from the magnitude of earnings response coefficients. An S-shaped
return–earnings relation is seen from the empirical results of Beaver et al.
(1979). They find that abnormal returns associated with extreme earnings
changes are not proportionately as large as those associated with the non-
extreme earnings change portfolios, which gives rise to an S-shaped return–
earnings relation. One interpretation is that the market does not expect extreme
earnings changes to be permanent, so the price adjustment is smaller. Thus,
there is a negative correlation between the absolute magnitude of the earnings
change and the likelihood that it is permanent. An appealing economic
intuition exists for this correlation. Either extreme earnings changes are a result
of one-time, windfall gains and losses, or competition in the product market
makes it unlikely that the extreme high level of profitability can be sustained.
At the extreme low level of earnings, the abandonment option argument is
relevant.
Freeman and Tse (1992) model the non-linear relation using an arc-tangent
transformation. Cheng et al. (1992) propose a rank-regression approach
to tackle non-linearity. Other research on the non-linear return–earnings
relation includes Abdel-khalik (1990), Das and Lev (1994), Hayn (1995),
Subramanyam (1996a), Basu (1997), and Beneish and Harvey (1998). While
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 135

the research on non-linearity is successful in improving the return–earnings


regression fit, a strong economic foundation for the modeling is not apparent.
Therefore, researchers must exercise caution in employing ad hoc statistical
refinements.

4.1.1.6. Discriminating between competing hypotheses. Researchers have


used many different research designs to discriminate between the above
four competing hypotheses to explain the weak return–earnings correlation
and why estimated earnings response coefficients are too small compared
to those predicted on the basis of a random walk time series property of
annual earnings. Prices leading earnings and the presence of transitory earnings
appear to be the dominant explanations for the modest contemporaneous
return–earnings association and for the observed magnitudes of earnings
response coefficients. A summary of this research will hopefully make this
apparent.
There is another reason for summarizing the above research. In many
applications, researchers choose a research design from among many
alternatives available. To facilitate research design selection in the future, I
summarize the central features of and pros and cons of the research designs
using common notation. The modeling below extends Fama’s (1990) analysis
of the effect of expanding the measurement window for both returns and
earnings (industrial production) on the return–earnings correlation and
earnings response coefficient.
An important distinction between the analysis in Fama (1990) or similar
studies in finance and the return–earnings literature in accounting centers
around the maintained hypothesis and motivation for the studies. In the
finance literature, the maintained hypothesis is that explanatory variables like
industrial production are real, economic, fundamental variables that a
researcher has measured with a reasonable degree of accuracy. The motivation
for their tests is to examine whether time-series or cross-sectional variation in
stock returns is rational (efficient) in the sense that it is largely explained by
economic fundamentals. The alternative hypothesis is that pricing in the
market is not an outcome of the market participants’ rational economic
behavior. The objective of the accounting literature like Ball and Brown (1968)
or Easton et al. (1992) is to assess whether the accounting earnings
determination process captures the factors that affect security prices, with
the maintained hypothesis that capital markets are informationally efficient.
So, market efficiency is a maintained hypothesis and whether accounting
captures underlying economic reality that moves the market is tested in the
research (see Patell (1979) for a mathematically elegant treatment of these
issues).
4.1.1.6.1. Assumptions and variable definitions. I present a simple model of
the relation between earnings growth rates and stock returns, which captures
136 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

the prices-lead-earnings phenomenon. I use growth rates because it simplifies


the analysis. However, the intuition from the analysis is equally applicable to
return–earnings analysis that uses earnings or earnings change deflated by price
as the earnings variable in the regressions. The particulars of the econometrics
naturally change with different specifications of the variables, but the
qualitative results continue to hold.
Suppose earnings growth in period t; Xt ; is
Xt ¼ xt þ yt1 ; ð1Þ

where xt is the portion of earnings growth that is news to the market, whereas
yt1 is the portion of earnings growth that the market had anticipated at the
beginning of period t: Stated differently, yt1 is past earnings news that shows
up in period t’s earnings, i.e., prices lead earnings. Further assume that xt and
yt1 are uncorrelated and i.i.d. with s2 ðxÞ ¼ s2 ðyÞ ¼ s2 U These assumptions
imply earnings follow a random walk and that each component of earnings
growth contributes to a new permanent level of earnings. Using earnings
growth rates empirically poses practical difficulties because earnings can be
negative. I assume this issue away here in the interest of a simple analysis that
communicates the intuition.
Stock prices respond only to information about earnings growth, i.e.,
discount rates are assumed constant inter-temporally and cross-sectionally.
Given the assumptions about earnings growth rates, return in period t; Rt ; is
R t ¼ xt þ y t : ð2Þ

Current stock return reflects the news in current earnings and news about
earnings growth that will be captured in the next period’s earnings. In this
model, the market is assumed to have information about one-period-ahead
earnings growth rate. This is a conservative assumption in that previous
research suggests prices reflect information about two-to-three-year-ahead
earnings growth (e.g., Kothari and Sloan, 1992).
Since all the earnings information is expressed in terms of growth rates
and because all earnings growth is assumed to be permanent, annual
stock returns are simply the sum of the earnings growth rates that are news
to the market. That is, there is a one-to-one correspondence between stock
returns and news in earnings growth rates, and the price response to
unexpected earnings growth, i.e., the earnings response coefficient, is one. If,
instead of using earnings growth rates, unexpected earnings deflated by the
beginning of the period price are used, then the earnings response coefficient is
ð1 þ 1=rÞ:
4.1.1.6.2. Contemporaneous one-period return–earnings relation. This is the
commonly estimated annual return–earnings relation:
Rt ¼ a þ bXt þ et ; ð3Þ
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 137

where b is the earnings response coefficient. The regression estimate of b is


b ¼ CovðRt ; Xt Þ=VarðXt Þ
¼ Covðxt þ yt ; xt þ yt1 Þ=Varðxt þ yt1 Þ
¼ Covðxt ; xt Þ=½Varðxt Þ þ Varðyt1 Þ
¼ s2 =ðs2 þ s2 Þ
¼ 0:5: ð4Þ
To determine the explanatory power, adjusted R2 ; of the regression, consider
the decomposition of the dependent variable’s variance ð¼ 2s2 Þ:
VarðRt Þ ¼ b2 VarðXt ÞþVarðet Þ;

2s2 ¼ 0:52 ½Varðxt Þ þ Varðyt1 Þ þ Varðet Þ


¼ 0:52 ½s2 þ s2  þ Varðet Þ
¼ 0:5s2 þ 1:5s2 : ð5Þ
From (5), the adjusted R2 ; denoted as R2 for parsimony, is
R2 ¼ ð2s2  1:5s2 Þ=2s2 ¼ 25%: ð6Þ
Eqs. (4) and (6) provide results of a contemporaneous return–earnings
regression with the market anticipating half the information in earnings growth
rates [i.e, Varðxt Þ¼ Varðyt1 Þ] one period ahead. The earnings response
coefficient is 50% biased and the explanatory power of the regression is
25%. The estimated earnings response coefficient is biased because the
anticipated portion of the earnings growth rate, yt1 ; is stale information that
is irrelevant to explaining variation in current returns and it acts as
measurement error in the independent variable. Bias in the slope coefficient
reduces the model’s explanatory power. This errors-in-variables problem is
exacerbated if the market anticipated earnings growth rates more than one
period in advance.
In addition to the errors-in-variables problem, note also that whereas
variation in Rt is due to earnings growth rates xt and yt ; which are reflected in
current and next period’s earnings, yt is not included in the regression model.
The absence of yt means there is an omitted variable. This also contributes to
reducing the model’s explanatory power. Since yt is (assumed to be)
uncorrelated with the included independent variable, Xt ð¼ xt þ yt1 Þ; the
coefficients on the included earnings growth rates are not biased due to a
correlated omitted variable.
Include future earnings in the return–earnings model: Previous research in
accounting and finance employs several alternative approaches to mitigate the
errors-in-variables and omitted-variable problems in the return–earnings or
similar regressions. Jacobson and Aaker (1993) and Warfield and Wild (1992)
in return–earnings regressions and Fama (1990) and Schwert (1990) in
138 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

Fig. 1.

regressions of returns on industrial production include future years’ earnings or


production growth. In the context of the simple model, their approach
estimates the following model (see Fig. 1):
Rt ¼ a þ bXt þ cXtþ1 þ et : ð7Þ

In this case, since Xt and Xtþ1 are uncorrelated (because the x and y
components of earnings growth rates are assumed to be i.i.d.), b is the same as
before in the univariate regression of returns on contemporaneous earnings
growth, i.e., b ¼ 0:5: The expected value of c is
c ¼ Covðxt þ yt ; xtþ1 þ yt Þ=Varðxtþ1 þ yt Þ ¼ 0:5: ð8Þ
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 139

To derive the model’s explanatory power, I decompose the variances


VarðRt Þ ¼ b2 VarðXt Þ þ c2 VarðXtþ1 Þ þ Varðet Þ;

2s2 ¼ 0:52 ½2s2  þ 0:52 ½2s2  þ Varðet Þ ¼ s2 þ s2 ðet Þ; ð9Þ

R2 ¼ s2 =2s2 ¼ 50%: ð10Þ


The explanatory power increases from 25% for the contemporaneous
regression model to 50% upon the inclusion of future earnings growth rate.
Coefficients on both current and future earnings growth will be value relevant,
but biased because both contain earnings growth rate components that are
irrelevant to explaining Rt : This also dampens the explanatory power. The R2
is greater than that of the contemporaneous model because there is no omitted
variable in Eq. (7).
4.1.1.6.3. Expanding the return–earnings measurement window. Easton et al.
(1992), Warfield and Wild (1992), Fama (1990), and Schwert (1990) report
results of estimating contemporaneous return–earnings models in which both
returns and earnings measurement windows are allowed to vary. Expanding
the measurement window mitigates both errors-in-variable and omitted-
variable problems that arise because of prices leading earnings. In addition,
if the noise is mean-reverting, then the ratio of the variance of noise to the
variance of value-relevant earnings will decrease as the measurement window is
expanded.33 Ignoring noise, the effect of expanding the return–earnings
measurement window on the following contemporaneous regression is (see
Fig. 1)
Rt þ Rtþ1 ¼ a þ bðXt þ Xtþ1 Þ þ et;tþ1 : ð11Þ
The slope coefficient is
Cov½ðxt þ yt þ xtþ1 þ ytþ1 Þ; ðxt þ yt1 þ xtþ1 þ yt Þ
b ¼
Var½ðxt þ yt1 þ xtþ1 þ yt Þ
¼ 3s2 =4s2
¼ 0:75: ð12Þ
The explanatory power is
VarðRt þ Rtþ1 Þ ¼ b2 VarðXt þ Xtþ1 Þ þ Varðet;tþ1 Þ;

4s2 ¼ 0:752  4s2 þ Varðet;tþ1 Þ: ð13Þ

33
In case of mean-reverting noise, variance of the sum of noise over n periods is less than n times
the variance of noise in a single period. In contrast, i.i.d. value-relevant growth implies the variance
of the sum of earnings growth rates over n periods is n times the single-period variance of the
earnings growth rate. This causes the ratio of the variance of noise to the variance of earnings
growth to decline as the measurement window is expanded.
140 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

From Eq. (13), the R2 of the regression model (11) is 56.25%. The above
analysis demonstrates that expanding the return measurement window yields a
less biased earnings response coefficient and a higher explanatory power than
in the case of a single-period contemporaneous return–earnings regression. If
the measurement window is expanded further, then an even stronger regression
fit will be obtained and the estimated slope becomes less biased.34 However,
there will always be an end-point problem. Some forward-looking information
about earnings growth exists in returns, ytþ1 in Eq. (12), but it is missing from
the earnings variable (i.e., the omitted-variable problem). Similarly, earnings
growth at the beginning part of the measurement window contains some stale
information, yt1 in Eq. (12), which serves as measurement error in the
independent variable.
4.1.1.6.4. Including leading period return. Kothari and Sloan (1992),
Warfield and Wild (1992), and Jacobson and Aaker (1993) regress current
and past returns on current period earnings to overcome the errors-in-variables
problem that arises in a return–earnings regression as a result of prices leading
earnings. The regression in the context of the simple model here is (see Fig. 1)
ðRt þ Rt1 Þ ¼ a þ bXt þ et1;t : ð14Þ
The slope coefficient is
b ¼ Cov½ðxt þ yt þ xt1 þ yt1 Þ; ðxt þ yt1 Þ=Var½ðxt þ yt1 Þ
¼ 2s2 =2s2
¼ 1: ð15Þ
The explanatory power is
VarðRt þ Rt1 Þ ¼ b2 VarðXt Þ þ Varðet1;t Þ;

4s2 ¼ 12 2s2 þ Varðet1;t Þ: ð16Þ


From Eq. (16), the R2 of the regression model (14) is 50%, even though the
slope coefficient is unbiased. The return–earnings association is not perfect
because there are omitted (explanatory) variables in the model to explain
information about future earnings growth that is reflected in current returns. In

34
Unfortunately there are disadvantages of expanding the window too much. First, as the
window is expanded, a larger fraction of the variation in the dependent variable in the cross section
is accounted for by differences in expected rates of returns in the cross section. Therefore, it
becomes increasingly difficult to unambiguously attribute explained variation from the return–
earnings regression to earnings (or cash flow) information (see Easton et al. (1992) for a discussion
of this concern and Fama and French (1988), Fama (1990), and Sloan (1993) for a discussion of the
sources of variability in returns). Second, as the measurement window is expanded, a researcher
must impose increasingly stringent data availability requirements, which introduces survivor biases.
Third, discriminating between noise and prices-lead-earnings explanations becomes tenuous.
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 141

addition, the dependent variable has some news about earnings in period t  1;
xt1 ; that is also not included in the explanatory variable, Xt :
Leading period returns in regression model (14) are helpful in discriminating
between the noise and prices-lead-earnings hypotheses. In the presence of noise
the slope coefficient will not approach one, whereas by including higher-order
lagged returns, the prices-lead-earnings phenomenon will be captured and the
slope coefficient will increase towards one. Presence of transitory components
in earnings will prevent the model from yielding a slope coefficient of one,
however. Evidence in Kothari and Sloan (1992) suggests a dramatic rise in the
earnings response coefficient as leading period returns are included, consistent
with price leading earnings being an important characteristic of the
information environment. Their estimated slope coefficients fall short of
approaching the price–earnings multiples, consistent with both noise and
transitory earnings components.
4.1.1.6.5. Including future earnings and future returns. We saw earlier that
when returns are regressed on current and future earnings growth, an errors-in-
variables problem arises in part because future earnings growth contains future
information that cannot explain current returns. Drawing on Kothari and
Shanken (1992), Collins et al. (1994) mitigate this errors-in-variables problem
by including future return as an independent variable. The benefit of future
return arises through its correlation with the new information in future
earnings growth. Econometrically, future return removes the new information
error from the future earnings growth variable.35 Specifically, the regression
model is (see Fig. 1)
Rt ¼ a þ bXt þ cXtþ1 þ dRtþ1 þ et : ð17Þ

The intuition for why including Rtþ1 mitigates the errors-in-variables


problem in using future earnings growth is best seen from the following
equivalent two-stage procedure (see the appendix of Kothari and Shanken,
1992). If Xtþ1 is regressed on Rtþ1 in a first stage regression, then the residual
from that regression will be the portion of t þ 1 period earnings growth that is
unrelated to new information in Rtþ1 : This residual is (a noisy estimate of) the
anticipated portion of earnings growth or the yt component of Xtþ1 in the
context of the simple model in this section. The second-stage of the procedure
is a regression of Rt on Xt and the residual from the first stage regression, i.e.,
an estimate of yt :
If proxies for both the new information in future earnings growth and for the
anticipated component of current growth are accurate, then the approach in
35
For a related practice in the accounting literature of using prior returns as a proxy for expected
earnings, see Brown et al. (1987b), Collins et al. (1987), and Lys and Sivaramakrishnan (1988).
Instead of past returns, Collins et al. (1994) use earnings yield at time t  1 to control for the
anticipated earnings growth for period t:
142 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

Kothari and Shanken (1992) and Collins et al. (1994) will be successful. That is,
the estimated earnings response coefficients will be unbiased and the model’s
explanatory power will approach 100%. Note that the model in Eq. (17) will
have to be expanded to also include proxies for the anticipated component of
current growth, Xt : Of course, success of the model depends crucially on the
quality of the proxies. Evidence in Collins et al. is largely consistent with the
prices-lead-earnings argument and they find little support for the noise-in-
earnings hypothesis.

4.1.1.6.6. Use of analysts’ forecasts instead of future returns. Recently, Liu


and Thomas (1999a, b), Dechow et al. (1999), and others have begun to directly
incorporate information about revised expectations of future earnings growth
in a return–earnings regression through the use of analysts’ forecasts.36 This is
similar in spirit to the model in Eq. (17) in which expectations about earnings
growth are econometrically backed out through the use of actual future
earnings growth minus the impact of new information on future earnings
growth. The Liu and Thomas (1999a, b) type of research begins with the
Edwards and Bell (1961), Peasnell (1982), Ohlson (1995), and Feltham and
Ohlson (1995) residual income valuation model. This model defines price as the
sum of the book value of equity and the discounted present value of expected
future residual earnings (i.e., earnings in excess of the cost of the expected book
value of the equity capital employed in future years).37 Residual income
valuation models are a transformation of the dividend-discounting model (see
Feltham and Ohlson, 1995; Dechow et al., 1999; or Lee, 1999), but express
value directly in terms of current and future accounting numbers, book values
and earnings. This potentially facilitates the use of analysts’ forecasts.
Researchers typically use analysts’ forecasts of earnings and book values of
equity to proxy for expected future residual earnings.38 Availability of forecasts
in a machine-readable form has spurred the use of analysts’ forecasts in capital
markets research (see below). Recent research that uses analysts’ forecasts
documents a strong association between returns and contemporaneous
earnings and revisions in analysts’ forecasts in a residual income framework.
However, more research is needed to determine whether the source of the

36
Also see Abdel-khalik (1990) for a similar approach with the motivation of developing a
return–earnings model that accounts for non-linearity.
37
For a historical perspective on the concept of residual income valuation, see Biddle et al.
(1997), who trace it all the way back to Hamilton (1777) and Marshall (1890).
38
Use of analysts’ forecasts generally violates the clean surplus assumption underlying the
residual income model because analysts’ forecasts often exclude items that affect book values of
equity. However, the use of analysts’ forecasts should be guided by their usefulness in explaining
and predicting empirical phenomena rather than whether they are consistent with the clean surplus
assumption.
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 143

improved association is the use of analysts’ forecasts or the residual income


model or a combination. A comparison with simpler models with and without
analysts’ forecasts would be a natural next step. Dechow et al. (1999) have
made a very good beginning in this respect.39
4.1.1.6.7. Levels regression to obtain less biased estimates of earnings response
coefficients. Kothari and Zimmerman (1995) argue that one advantage of
the levels regression (i.e., price regressed on earnings) is that the errors-
in-variables problem is avoided. The logic is straightforward. Current
price contains all the information in current earnings plus some forward-
looking information that is missing from current earnings because prices lead
earnings. Therefore, when price is regressed on earnings, there is no errors-in-
variables problem in the right-hand-side variable. Only forward-looking
information, which is uncorrelated with the included independent variable,
earnings, is omitted from the regression. The econometric consequence is that
the estimated earnings response coefficient is unbiased, but that the
explanatory power is sacrificed because of the omitted forward-looking
information.
The bad news in using levels regressions is that there are potentially other
econometric problems, like correlated omitted variables (e.g., growth), and
heteroskedasticity. These and other related issues are discussed thoroughly in
Brown et al. (1999) and Holthausen and Watts (2001).

4.1.1.7. Bottom line. The earnings response coefficient research has made
significant progress in the last decade. However, notwithstanding these
refinements, I believe the best a researcher can do currently is to test whether
a coefficient is statistically significant or whether it is significantly greater than
the coefficient on another variable (e.g., coefficient on earnings versus on cash
flow from operations). The research also suggests that controlling for the
effects of persistence, growth, and risk on earnings response coefficients is
important. It is rare to see research examining whether the estimated coefficient
equals some predicted value. Only occasionally have researchers attempted to
test whether the estimated coefficient on transitory earnings equals one (e.g.,
Barth et al., 1992). The lack of tests of predicted coefficient magnitudes is in
part because predicted values depend on unobservable forecasted earnings
growth rates over all future periods and expected discount rates for future
periods’ earnings. Levels regressions yield earnings response coefficient
estimates that are closer to economically plausible values. However, severe
econometric problems make their use less attractive (see Holthausen and
Watts, 2001).

39
While there are advantages of using analysts’ forecasts, there are also problems because of
apparent optimism in analysts’ forecasts, which varies cross-sectionally with earnings skewness (see
Gu and Wu, 2000). I defer a detailed discussion of these issues to the next section.
144 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

4.1.2. Time series, management, and analysts’ forecasts of earnings


This section explains the motivation for research on properties of time series,
management, and analysts’ forecasts of earnings (Section 4.1.2.1). I then
describe research on the properties of time-series forecasts of earnings in
Section 4.1.2.2, management’s forecasts in Section 4.1.2.3, and finally the
research on analysts’ forecasts in Section 4.1.2.4.

4.1.2.1. Motivation for research on earnings forecasts. There are at least five
reasons for research on the time-series properties of earnings and properties of
management and analysts’ forecasts (see Watts and Zimmerman (1986,
Chapter 6), Schipper (1991), and Brown (1993) for discussions of some of
these reasons). First, almost all models of valuation either directly or indirectly
use earnings forecasts. The discounted cash flow valuation models (Fama and
Miller, 1972, Chapter 2) often use forecasted earnings, with some adjustments,
as proxies for future cash flows. The analytically equivalent residual-income
valuation models (e.g., Edwards and Bell, 1961; Ohlson, 1995; Feltham and
Ohlson, 1995) discount forecasted earnings net of ‘‘normal’’ earnings.
Second, capital markets research that correlates financial statement
information with security returns frequently uses a model of expected earnings
to isolate the surprise component of earnings from the anticipated component.
In an efficient capital market, the anticipated component is uncorrelated with
future returns, which are measured over the announcement period or the
association study period. Any anticipated component that smears the
estimated proxy for the surprise component of earnings, serves as noise or
measurement error in the proxy and weakens the estimated return–earnings
association. Thus, the degree of return–earnings association hinges critically on
the accuracy of the unexpected earnings proxy used by a researcher, which
naturally creates a demand for the time-series properties of earnings or
analysts’ forecasts.
Third, the efficient markets hypothesis is being increasingly questioned, both
empirically and theoretically (with behavioral finance models of inefficient
markets; see Daniel et al., 1998; Barberis et al., 1998; Hong and Stein, 1999).
Accounting-based capital market research has produced evidence that is
apparently inconsistent with market efficiency (see the detailed review below).
A common feature of this research is to show that security returns are
predictable and that their predictability is associated with the time-series
properties of earnings and/or properties of analysts’ forecasts, which creates a
demand for research in the time-series properties of earnings and earnings
forecasts.
Fourth, positive accounting theory research hypothesizes efficient or
opportunistic earnings management and/or seeks to explain managers’
accounting procedure choices. In this research there is often a need for
‘‘normal’’ earnings that are calculated using a time-series model of earnings.
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 145

For example, tests of the earnings smoothing hypothesis might examine


properties of pre-smoothed and smoothed time series of earnings.
Finally, analyst and management forecasts are a source of information in the
capital markets. The forecasts thus affect the information environment and
influence the level and variability of security prices. There is a large literature
(see Healy and Palepu, 2001) that examines the nature of the information
environment, the demand and supply of forecasts, the incentives facing
management and analysts and their effect on the properties of the forecasts, the
effect of the properties of the forecasts on the variability of security returns and
cost of capital, etc. In this research, properties of management and analysts’
forecasts are an input.

4.1.2.2. Time-series properties of earnings. Brown (1993) examines the large


body of literature on the time-series properties of earnings. I deliberately keep
my remarks on the earnings’ time-series properties short because I believe this
literature is fast becoming extinct. The main reason is the easy availability of a
better substitute: analysts’ forecasts are available at a low cost in machine-
readable form for a large fraction of publicly traded firms (see below).
4.1.2.2.1. Properties of annual earnings. Random walk: A large body of
evidence suggests a random walk or random walk with drift is a reasonable
description of the time-series properties of annual earnings. The early evidence
appears in Little (1962), Little and Rayner (1966), Lintner and Glauber (1967),
and additional references in Ball and Watts (1972). Ball and Watts (1972)
conduct the first systematic study and fail to reject the random walk time-series
property for annual earnings. Subsequent research confirms their conclusion
(see Watts, 1970; Watts and Leftwich, 1977; Albrecht et al., 1977) by testing
against the predictive ability of Box–Jenkins models of annual earnings vis-"a-
vis the random walk model. This is notwithstanding the indication of negative
first-order autocorrelation in Ball and Watts (1972, Table 3) and other
research.40
The random walk property of annual earnings is puzzling. Unlike the
random walk property of security prices, which is a theoretical prediction of
the efficient capital markets hypothesis, economic theory does not predict a
random walk in earnings.41 Accounting earnings do not represent the
capitalization of expected future cash flows like prices. Therefore, there is no
40
In-sample estimates of autocorrelation coefficients are biased downward because of the small
sample bias that equals 21=ðT  1Þ; where T is the number of time-series observations (see
Kendall, 1954; Jacob and Lys, 1995). Bias-adjusted first-order serial correlation coefficients for
annual earnings changes are close to zero (see Dechow et al., 1998a, Table 5).
41
The random walk property of security prices in an efficient capital market requires the
additional assumption of constant expected rates of return, which might not be descriptive (see
Fama, 1976, Chapter 5; Fama and French, 1988; Kothari and Shanken, 1997). Therefore, the
random walk property is only an approximate prediction.
146 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

economic reason to expect annual earnings to follow a random walk (see, for
example, Fama and Miller, 1972, Chapter 2; Watts and Zimmerman, 1986,
Chapter 6).
Mean reversion: Starting with Brooks and Buckmaster (1976), a number of
studies document evidence of mild mean reversion in annual earnings (see, for
recent studies, Ramakrishnan and Thomas, 1992; Lipe and Kormendi, 1994;
Fama and French, 2000). However, interpreting evidence of mean reversion
from in-sample estimates of the time-series parameter values requires caution.
Notwithstanding the evidence of mean reversion, predictive ability might not
be much better than a random walk model in holdout samples (see Watts,
1970; Watts and Leftwich, 1977; Brown, 1993).
Economic reasons for mean reversion: There are several economic and
statistical reasons to expect mean reversion in earnings. First, competition in
product markets implies that above-normal profitability is not sustainable
(Beaver and Morse, 1978; Lev, 1983; Ohlson, 1995; Fama and French, 2000).
Second, accounting conservatism (see Basu, 1997) and litigation risk (see
Kothari et al., 1988; Ball et al., 2000) motivate managers to recognize economic
bad news more quickly than good news. As a result, firms often recognize
anticipated losses.42 This recognition of losses makes losses less permanent and
thus induces negative autocorrelation in earnings. Third, firms incurring losses
have the option to liquidate the firm if the management does not anticipate
recovery (Hayn, 1995; Berger et al., 1996; Burgstahler and Dichev, 1997;
Collins et al., 1999). That means surviving firms are expected to reverse the
poor performance. Thus, the abandonment option and survivor bias together
imply the time series of earnings will exhibit reversals. Finally, the incidence of
transitory special items and losses has increased dramatically over time (see, for
example, Hayn, 1995; Elliott and Hanna, 1996; Collins et al., 1997), which
means earnings changes are predictable. The increase in transitory items might
be due in part to a shift in standard setting by the SEC and FASB toward
mark-to-market accounting for some assets and liabilities.
Cross-sectional estimation: Fama and French (2000) introduce a cross-
sectional estimation approach to the earnings forecasting literature to uncover
the time-series properties of earnings. They argue that time-series estimation
lacks power because there are only a few time-series observations of annual
earnings available for most firms. In addition, use of a long time series
introduces survivor bias. The survivor bias implies more observations of
positive earnings changes following positive changes than expected by chance,
for reasons discussed above. This offsets the underlying negative time-series
correlation in earnings changes. The effect of survivor bias, together with low

42
Agency theory-based reasons (e.g., the nature of compensation contracts and CEO turnover)
also might motivate managers to take a ‘‘big bath’’ in earnings.
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 147

power (i.e., large standard errors) of time-series estimation, favors the


conclusion of a random walk in annual earnings.
In a cross-sectional estimation, annual earnings (levels or changes, and with
or without a deflator) are regressed on its lagged observation. The estimation is
performed annually and inferences are drawn on the basis of the time series of
annual parameter estimates from the cross-sectional regressions. This is the
well-known Fama and MacBeth (1973) procedure.
One weakness of cross-sectional estimation is that firm-specific information
on the time-series properties is sacrificed. However, this is mitigated through a
conditional estimation of the cross-sectional regression. Conditional estimation
is an attempt to capture cross-sectional variation in the parameters of the time-
series process of earnings (e.g., the autocorrelation coefficient). This approach
is grounded in economic analysis, rather than the previous statistical exercise of
fitting the best time-series model of earnings (e.g., fitting the best Box–Jenkins
model). The conditional approach models the cross-sectional variation in
earnings’ autocorrelation coefficient as a function of its economic determi-
nants. That is, the coefficient is hypothesized to vary with the realized values of
a set of conditioning variables like past performance, dividend yield, leverage,
industry competition, etc.43 Since the number of observations in a cross section
is typically large, it is generally possible to accommodate many economic
determinants in the estimation. Overall, cross-sectional estimation enhances
power, overcomes survivor bias problems, and permits a researcher to
incorporate the effect of economic determinants of the time-series properties
of earnings.
Conditional cross-sectional estimation: Previous research employs at least
three different approaches to expand the information set beyond the past time
series of earnings in obtaining conditional earnings forecasts (or conditional
estimates of the parameters of the time-series process of earnings).
First, a conditional forecast is obtained using information on one or more
determinants of the autocorrelation coefficient of earnings. For example,
Brooks and Buckmaster (1976) focus on extreme earnings changes, Basu (1997)
examines negative earnings changes, and Lev (1983) identifies economic
determinants like barriers-to-entry in an industry, firm size, product type, and
capital intensity of a firm; also see Freeman et al. (1982) and Freeman and Tse
(1989, 1992). Recent studies estimating conditional forecasts include Fama and
French (2000) and Dechow et al. (1999).
Second, price-based forecasts are used to improve on the time-series
forecasts of earnings on the premise that prices reflect a richer information
set than the past time series of earnings (Beaver et al., 1980). Research

43
The econometric approach to estimate a parameter conditional on a set of (state) variables is
well developed in finance and economics. See, for example, Shanken (1990), Chan and Chen (1988),
and Ferson and Schadt (1996) for time-varying conditional best estimation.
148 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

examining price-based earnings forecasts includes Beaver and Morse (1978),


Freeman et al. (1982), Collins et al. (1987), Beaver et al. (1987), and Freeman
(1987). Notwithstanding the fact that prices reflect a richer information set
than the past time series of earnings, researchers have found it difficult to
harness the information in prices at the firm level to make an economically
important improvement. Therefore, this research has had only a modest impact
on forecasting. The benefit of prices in improving forecasts or in backing out
market expectations is primarily in long-horizon settings (e.g., Easton et al.,
1992; Kothari and Sloan, 1992; Collins et al., 1994) precisely because prices
anticipate earnings information for several future periods.
Finally, Ou and Penman (1989a, b), Lev and Thiagarajan (1993), and
Abarbanell and Bushee (1997, 1998) use financial statement analysis of income
statement and balance sheet ratios to forecast future earnings and stock
returns. The primary motivation for this research is to employ fundamental
analysis to identify mispriced securities. Superior earnings forecasts are only an
intermediate product of this research.
4.1.2.2.2. Properties of quarterly earnings. Interest in the time-series proper-
ties of quarterly earnings arises for at least four reasons. First, quarterly
earnings are seasonal in many industries because of the seasonal nature of their
main business activity (e.g., apparel sales and toy sales). Second, quarterly
earnings are more timely, so the use of a quarterly earnings forecast as a proxy
for the market’s expectation is likely more accurate than using a stale annual
earnings forecast.
Third, GAAP requires that the quarterly reporting period is viewed as an
integral part of the annual reporting period (see APB, 1973, Opinion No. 28;
FASB, 1974, SFAS No. 3; FASB, 1977, FASB Interpretation No. 18). As a
result, firms are required to estimate annual operating expenses and allocate
these costs to quarterly periods. The fourth quarter thus offsets the intentional
(i.e., opportunistic) and unintentional estimation errors in allocating expenses
to the first three quarterly periods. This contributes to differences in the
properties of fourth versus the first three quarterly earnings (see Bathke and
Lorek, 1984; Collins et al., 1984; Mendenhall and Nichols, 1988; Salamon and
Stober, 1994). More importantly, quarterly earnings are potentially a more
powerful setting to test positive accounting theory based and capital markets
research hypotheses (see, for example, Salamon and Stober, 1994; Hayn and
Watts, 1997; Rangan and Sloan, 1998). The source of the power comes from
the fact that the errors in estimating operating expenses in the first three
quarters are offset in the fourth quarter, thus permitting tests that exploit this
property of error reversals. One downside of using quarterly earnings is that
they are not audited.
Finally, there are four times as many quarterly earnings observations as
annual earnings observations. To the extent there is a loss of information in
aggregation, a quarterly earnings time series has the potential to generate more
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 149

precise annual earnings forecasts than annual earnings-based forecasts (see for
evidence, Hopwood et al., 1982). That is, less stringent data availability
requirements are necessary using quarterly than annual earnings to achieve the
same degree of precision of the forecasts. This enables the researcher to reduce
survivor biases and to use a larger sample of firms.
While a quarterly earnings forecast is likely a more timely and accurate
proxy for the market’s expectation of earnings at the time of an earnings
announcement, this benefit should be tempered by the following potential
downside. The market’s reaction to any information event reflects the revision
in expectation of cash flows for all future periods. The market might be
responding to information about future quarters, which may or may not be
highly correlated with the information over a quarter (a relatively short time
period). Therefore, despite greater accuracy, the strength of the association
between the quarterly earnings surprise and narrow-window stock price
reaction to the surprise is not higher than a long-window association (e.g., one
year or longer). Recent evidence in Kinney et al. (1999) shows that the odds of
the same sign of stock returns and earnings surprise are no greater than 60–
40% even when using composite earnings forecasts tabulated by First Call
Corporation.44 The lack of a strong association should not be interpreted
mechanically as an indication of noise in the earnings expectation proxy. The
modest association is likely an indication of prices responding to information
about future income that are unrelated to the current earnings information.
That is, the forward-looking nature of prices with respect to earnings becomes
an important consideration (see Kinney et al., 1999; Lev, 1989; Easton et al.,
1992; Kothari and Sloan, 1992; Collins et al., 1994). In addition, increased
incidence of transitory items in earnings in recent years further weakens the
relation between current earnings surprise and revisions in expectations about
future periods’ earnings as captured in the announcement period price change.
ARIMA properties of quarterly earnings: Well-developed Box–Jenkins
autoregressive integrated moving average (ARIMA) models of quarterly
earnings exist (Foster, 1977; Griffin, 1977; Watts, 1975; Brown and Rozeff,
1979). Research comparing the models shows that the Brown and Rozeff
(1979) model is slightly superior in forecast accuracy at least over short
horizons (see Brown et al., 1987a). However, this advantage does not
necessarily show up as a stronger association with short-window returns
around quarterly earnings announcements (see Brown et al., 1987b). Simpler
models like Foster (1977) do just as well as the more complicated models. The

44
Kinney et al. (1999) use annual, not quarterly earnings forecast error. However, since first three
quarters’ earnings are known at the time of the annual earnings announcement, examining the
association of annual earnings forecast error with a narrow window return is almost equivalent to
examining a relation between quarterly earnings surprise and stock returns.
150 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

main advantage of the Foster (1977) model is that it can be estimated without
the Box–Jenkins ARIMA software.
Currently the main use of quarterly earnings time-series models is in tests of
market efficiency examining post-earnings-announcement drift (see below). In
other capital markets research, researchers almost invariably use analysts’ or
management forecasts of earnings. As seen below, these forecasts are not only
easily available, but they are more accurate and more highly associated with
security returns.
4.1.2.2.3. Properties of components of earnings. There are at least three
reasons for researchers’ interest in the properties of earnings components.
First, to examine whether earnings components are incrementally informative
beyond earnings in their association with security prices.45 This research is
generally aimed at evaluating standards that require earnings components to
be disclosed and fundamental analysis. Conclusions about the incremental
association or information content of earnings components hinge on the
accuracy of the proxies for the unexpected portion of the earnings components,
which creates a demand for the time-series properties of earnings components.
Second, accruals and cash flows are the two most commonly examined
components of earnings. Operating accruals represent accountants’ attempt to
transform operating cash flows into earnings that are more informative about
firm performance and thus make earnings a more useful measure for
contracting and/or in fundamental analysis or valuation. However, self-
interested managers might use accounting discretion opportunistically and
manipulate accruals, which would distort earnings as a measure of firm
performance. Tests of accrual management hypotheses based on positive
accounting theory examine accounting accruals’ properties. These tests provide
a motivation for research in the time-series properties of accruals and cash
flows and other earnings components (e.g., current and non-current accruals,
operating and investing cash flows, etc.).
Finally, interest in the time-series properties of earnings components also
arises because summing the forecasts of the components might yield a more
accurate forecast of earnings. The logic here is similar to that underlying the
aggregation of quarterly earnings forecasts to improve the accuracy of annual
earnings forecasts. The difference is that the aggregation of components is
contemporaneous (i.e., cross-sectional) whereas the aggregation of quarterly
forecasts is temporal. In both cases the assumption is that there is a loss of
information in aggregation.
4.1.2.2.4. Current status and future directions for research in earnings
components. There is an active interest in research on the properties of
earnings components because of both positive accounting research and

45
See, for example, Lipe (1986), Rayburn (1986), Wilson (1986, 1987), Livnat and Zarowin
(1990), Ohlson and Penman (1992), Dechow (1994), and Basu (1997).
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 151

fundamental analysis. Early research on the properties of accruals assumed


na.ıve models (e.g., DeAngelo, 1986; Healy, 1985), but progress has been made
since (e.g., Jones, 1991; Kang and Sivaramakrishnan, 1995; Dechow et al.,
1995). I believe that modeling earnings components’ properties using the
nature of economic transactions and the accounting recording of those
transactions is likely to be more fruitful than simply fitting time-series models
on earnings components (see Guay et al., 1996; Healy, 1996). Dechow et al.
(1998a) represent one attempt at modeling the time-series properties of
accruals, operating cash flows, and earnings with sales as the starting point or
primitive. The economic modeling of accruals or earnings components will not
necessarily provide the best fit for the historical data, but it might have
predictive power and ability to explain managerial behavior better than purely
statistical time-series models.

4.1.2.3. Management forecasts. Management forecasts have many labels,


including earnings warnings, earnings pre-announcements, and management’s
earnings forecasts. Earnings warnings and pre-announcements precede earn-
ings announcements and typically convey bad news. Management’s earnings
forecasts are often soon after earnings announcements and do not necessarily
communicate bad news to the market. Since management forecasts are
voluntary, there are economic motivations for the forecasts. A detailed
discussion of the economic issues surrounding management forecasts appears
in the Healy and Palepu (2001) and Verrecchia (2001) review papers. A few
examples of the economic issues include the following: (i) the threat of
litigation influencing management’s decision to issue voluntary forecasts and
forecasts of bad news (e.g., Skinner, 1994; Francis et al., 1994; Kasznik and
Lev, 1995); (ii) the effect of management’s concern about the proprietary cost
of disclosure on the nature of management forecasts (e.g., Bamber and Cheon,
1998); and (iii) the timing of management forecasts and the timing of insider
buying and selling of company stocks (Noe, 1999). In this review, I only
summarize the extant research on the properties of management forecasts. The
summary describes the main findings and the hypotheses tested in the
literature.
Early research on management forecasts appears in Patell (1976), Jaggi
(1978), Nichols and Tsay (1979), Penman (1980), Ajinkya and Gift (1984), and
Waymire (1984). They collectively show that management forecasts have
information content. Specifically, management forecast releases are associated
with significant increases in return variability (see e.g., Patell, 1976) and there is
a positive association between the unexpected component of the management
forecast and security returns around the forecast date (e.g., Ajinkya and Gift,
1984; Waymire, 1984).
One of the hypotheses for voluntary management forecasts is that through
the forecasts management aligns investors’ expectations with the superior
152 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

information that the management possesses (Ajinkya and Gift, 1984). This
expectation-adjustment hypothesis implies that management forecasts are
superior to market expectations of earnings at the time of management
forecasts. However, previous evidence in Imhoff (1978) and Imhoff and Par!e
(1982) suggested management forecasts are not systematically more accurate
than analysts’ forecasts. Evidence consistent with the superiority of manage-
ment vis-"a-vis analysts’ forecasts as a proxy for the market’s prevailing
expectation appears in Waymire (1984). Recent research examines issues like
the relation between various types, precision, and credibility of management
forecasts and security price changes (e.g., Pownall et al., 1993; Baginski et al.,
1993; Pownall and Waymire, 1989; Bamber and Cheon, 1998). Overall, the
evidence suggests that management forecasts have information content and the
information content is positively correlated with a number of determinants of
the quality of the management forecasts.

4.1.2.4. Analysts’ forecasts. There is a huge empirical and theoretical litera-


ture on analysts’ forecasts. I focus on the properties of analysts’ forecasts
and some determinants of these properties. I do not review the research
that examines why analysts forecast earnings, the determinants of the number
of analysts following a firm, and the consequences of analysts’ following on
the properties of security returns. Some of these issues are examined in
Verrecchia (2001) and Healy and Palepu (2001). I recognize that the issues n
ot examined here also affect the properties of analysts’ forecasts, but
nevertheless I consider those beyond the scope of my review of the capital
markets research.
Buy- and sell-side analysts issue earnings forecasts. Most research in
accounting examines sell-side analysts’ forecasts because these are publicly
available. Analysts from brokerage houses and investment-banking firms in the
financial services industry issue sell-side forecasts. Buy-side analysts are
typically employed by mutual funds and pension funds and issue forecasts
primarily for internal investment decision-making purposes. Like most of the
research on analysts’ forecasts, I review the research on sell-side analysts’
forecasts.
Analysts’ forecasts research can be broadly divided into two categories. The
first category examines properties of consensus analysts’ forecasts. A consensus
forecast is the mean or median of the analysts’ forecasts of (either quarterly or
annual or long-term) earnings of an individual firm. An example of research in
this category would be ‘‘Are analysts’ forecasts optimistic?’’ The second
category focuses on the properties of individual analysts’ forecasts either in the
cross section or temporally. This category examines questions like ‘‘What are
the determinants of an individual analyst’s forecast accuracy?’’ and ‘‘Does skill
affect the accuracy of an analyst’s forecast?’’ There is overlap between these
two areas of research, so the discussion is sometimes applicable to both.
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 153

4.1.2.4.1. Analysts’ forecasts compared to time-series forecasts. Early re-


search examines the accuracy of analysts’ forecasts and their association with
security returns, and compares these properties with time-series forecasts of
earnings. Brown and Rozeff (1978) were the first to document superior
accuracy of analysts’ forecasts over time-series forecasts of quarterly earnings.
Subsequent research offers conflicting evidence (see Collins and Hopwood
(1980) and Fried and Givoly (1982) for confirming the evidence in Brown and
Rozeff (1978), whereas Imhoff and Par!e (1982) for contradictory evidence) and
also raises the question of whether analysts’ superiority stemmed from their
timing advantage (i.e., access to more recent information) over time-series
models. Brown et al. (1987a, b) test for both accuracy and association with
security returns in comparing the quality of analysts’ forecasts against time-
series forecasts of quarterly earnings. They show that, even after controlling for
the timing advantage, analysts’ forecasts are more accurate and modestly more
highly associated with stock returns than time-series forecasts. O’Brien (1988),
however, documents conflicting evidence in which an autoregressive model
forecast is more highly associated with returns than I/B/E/S forecasts. The
conflicting evidence notwithstanding, in recent years it is common practice to
(implicitly) assume that analysts’ forecasts are a better surrogate for market’s
expectations than time-series forecasts. The issues of current interest are
whether analysts’ forecasts are biased, the determinants of the biases, and
whether the market recognizes the apparent biases in pricing securities.
4.1.2.4.2. Optimism in analysts’ forecasts. Many studies report evidence that
analysts’ forecasts are optimistic,46 although the optimism appears to be
waning in recent years (see Brown, 1997, 1998; Matsumoto, 1998; Richardson
et al., 1999). There are at least three hypotheses consistent with the decline in
analyst optimism: (i) analysts are learning from evidence of past biases (see
Mikhail et al. (1997), Jacob et al. (1999), and Clement (1999) for mixed
evidence on the effect of experience on learning); (ii) analysts’ incentives have
changed; and (iii) the quality of data used in the research examining analysts’
forecast properties has improved (e.g., suffers less from survivor biases or
selection biases).
4.1.2.4.3. Estimating bias in analysts’ forecasts. Forecast optimism is
inferred from a systematic positive difference between the forecast and actual
earnings per share. The optimism has been documented using Value Line, I/B/
E/S, and Zacks data sources for analysts’ forecasts (Lim, 1998). The estimates
of analyst optimism vary across studies in part because of differences in
research designs, variable definitions, and time periods examined. Consider, for
example, the following three recent studies that report properties of I/B/E/S

46
Examples include Barefield and Comiskey (1975), Crichfield et al. (1978), Fried and Givoly
(1982), Brown et al. (1985), O’Brien (1988), Stickel (1990), Abarbanell (1991), Ali et al. (1992),
Brown (1997, 1998), Lim (1998), Richardson et al. (1999), and Easterwood and Nutt (1999).
154 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

analysts’ forecasts: Lim (1998), Brown (1998), and Richardson et al. (1999).
Each uses over 100,000 firm-quarter observations and analyzes I/B/E/S
forecasts from approximately the same time period from 1983 or 1984 to
1996 or 1997.
Lim (1998, pp. 9–10) uses ‘‘the median of the unrevised estimates of a
quarter’s earnings across all brokerage firms’’, although the use of the mean of
analysts’ forecasts is not uncommon in the literature (see, for example, Chaney
et al., 1999).47 Richardson et al. (1999) use individual analyst’s forecast and
average the forecast errors each month, whereas Brown (1998) reports results
using only the most recent analyst forecast. Lim (1998) calculates forecast
errors as the difference between the earnings forecast and actual earnings per
share as reported on Compustat, based on the evidence in Philbrick and Ricks
(1991) that actual earnings reported by I/B/E/S suffers from an ‘‘alignment
problem’’. In contrast, Brown (1998) and Richardson et al. (1999) use I/B/E/S
actual earnings ‘‘for comparability with the forecast’’ (Richardson et al., 1999,
p. 7).
Previous research also differs in its treatment of outliers. Lim (1998) excludes
absolute forecast errors of $10 per share or more, while Brown (1998)
winsorizes absolute forecast errors greater than 25 cents per share and
Degeorge et al. (1999) delete absolute forecast errors greater than 25 cents per
share. Richardson et al. (1999) delete price-deflated forecast errors that exceed
10% in absolute value. Brown (1998), Degeorge et al. (1999), and Kasznik and
McNichols (2001) do not use a deflator in analyzing analysts’ forecast errors,
whereas Lim (1998) and Richardson et al. (1999) deflate forecast errors by
price. Analysis without a deflator implicitly assumes that the magnitude of
undeflated forecast error is not related to the level of earnings per share (i.e.,
forecast errors are not heteroskedastic). In contrast, use of price deflation
implicitly assumes that the deviation of the actual from forecasted earnings
depends on the level of earnings per share or price per share and that price
deflation mitigates heteroskedasticity.
4.1.2.4.4. Evidence of bias. Notwithstanding the research design differences,
the evidence in most of the studies suggests analysts’ optimism. This conclusion
should be tempered by the fact that the forecast samples examined in various
studies are not independent. Lim (1998) finds an average optimistic bias of
0.94%. of price. The bias is considerably higher at 2.5% of price for small firms
and it is 0.53% of price for large market capitalization stocks. He also reports
that the bias is pervasive in that it is observed every year and in every market

47
Note that even if the distribution of actual earnings might be skewed, the distribution of
analysts’ forecasts for a given firm need not be skewed, so the use of the mean or median of
analysts’ forecasts might not make much difference. Evidence in O’Brien (1988) indicates that
median forecasts are slightly smaller than the mean.
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 155

capitalization decile of sample firms, and it is observed in both newly covered


and not newly covered securities by analysts.
While the forecast biases reported in Lim (1998) seem both statistically and
economically large, Brown (1998) reports a mean bias of only a cent per share
in the most recent analyst’s forecast. His annual analysis from 1984 to 1997
reveals a range of bias from 2.6 cents per share optimism in 1993 to 0.39 cents
per share pessimism in 1997. Richardson et al. (1999) also find that the bias
declines dramatically, from 0.91% of the price to 0.09% of price, as the
forecast horizon is shortened from one year to one month (also see O’Brien,
1988). Like Brown (1998), Richardson et al. also report that the bias has turned
from optimism to pessimism in recent years. Abarbanell and Lehavy (2000a)
take issue with this conclusion. They argue that forecast data providers like
First Call, Zacks, and IBES have increasingly changed the definition of
reported earnings to earnings from continuing operations and now require
analysts to forecast earnings from continuing operations. Abarbanell and
Lehavy (2000a) conclude that this change ‘‘plays a dominant role in explaining
the recent declines in apparent forecast optimism and increases in the incidence
of zero and small pessimistic forecast errors’’.
In most studies the median forecast bias is quite small (e.g., 0.01% in Lim,
1998), which suggests that extreme observations hugely influence the results,
i.e., skewness of the earnings distribution drives the results. Consistent with
earnings skewness, Gu and Wu (2000) and Abarbanell and Lehavy (2000b) find
that a small number of forecast error observations disproportionately
contributes to the observed bias.
4.1.2.4.5. Potential research design problems. Despite the apparently com-
pelling evidence, I remain somewhat skeptical of the evidence of analysts’
forecast bias for several reasons. First, forecast earnings and actual earnings
against which the forecast is being compared do not always seem to be the
same (see I/B/E/S data definitions), especially when Compustat actuals are
used (see Sabino, 1999). Analysts generally forecast earnings without special
items and other one-time gains and losses. I/B/E/S apparently adjusts the
actual reported earnings number for special items and/or one-time gains and
losses to back out the earnings number the firm would have reported consistent
with the earnings number analysts were forecasting (see for details, Sabino,
1999; Abarbanell and Lehavy, 2000a). This procedure seems subjective and
whether it contributes to the observed bias (or noise) is worthy of investigation.
Second, the coverage of data has improved dramatically through the years
and the degree of bias has declined steadily (see evidence in Brown, 1997, 1998;
Richardson et al., 1999). Is the evidence of bias related to the improvement in
the coverage of firms in the data bases? Third, are there survival biases in the
data? Survival bias might arise not simply because firms go bankrupt, but
mostly because of mergers and acquisitions. Finally, what is the effect of
mixing stale forecasts with recent forecasts? Evidence suggests recent forecasts
156 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

are less biased than forecasts issued earlier. However, not all analysts revise
their forecasts, so the median forecast at any point in time is for a sample of
recent and stale forecasts. What is the contribution to the bias arising from
stale forecasts? Is analysts’ proclivity to revise forecasts diminished if a firm is
performing poorly? This would impart an optimistic bias as a result of using
stale forecasts (see Affleck-Graves et al., 1990; McNichols and O’Brien, 1997).
Analysis in Richardson et al. (1999), which examines forecast bias as a function
of the horizon, appears to be a step in the right direction.

4.1.2.4.6. Bias in long-horizon forecasts. In addition to quarterly earnings


forecasts, there is a large body of recent research that examines properties of
long-horizon analysts’ forecasts. Long-horizon forecasts are generally forecasts
of growth over two-to-five years. Analysis of long-term earnings growth
forecasts also reveals that these are generally optimistic (e.g., LaPorta, 1996;
Dechow and Sloan, 1997; Rajan and Servaes, 1997). An emerging body of
research examines analysts’ long-term forecasts in tests of market efficiency (see
below). I defer the discussion of some of the properties of analysts’ long-term
forecasts to the tests of market efficiency section of the paper.

4.1.2.4.7. Economic determinants of forecast bias. Evidence of optimism in


analysts’ forecasts has led to many studies proposing and testing hypotheses to
explain the optimistic bias. The hypotheses fall in two broad categories. First,
there are economic incentives based explanations for analysts’ forecast
optimism. Second, a behavioral cognitive-bias explanation for analysts’ bias
is proposed.
Incentives-based explanations: First, an important economic incentive
motivating ‘‘sell-side’’ analysts to issue optimistic earnings forecasts is the
compensation they receive for their services to the corporate finance arm of an
investment-banking firm.48 The corporate finance division derives revenues
mainly from services related to securities issues and merger-and-acquisition
activities. Sell-side analysts’ optimistic forecasts help the corporate finance
division generate business. The deterrent to analysts from issuing overly
optimistic forecasts is that a portion of their annual compensation and their
reputation, and thus human capital, are an increasing function of forecast
accuracy and a decreasing function of forecast bias.49 One prediction of the
hypothesis here is that analysts working for an investment-banking firm doing
business with the client firm (called affiliated analysts) would issue more
optimistic forecasts than unaffiliated analysts. Lin and McNichols (1998a),
48
See Adair (1995), Ali (1996), Dechow et al. (1999), Dugar and Nathan (1995), Hansen and
Sarin (1996), Hunton and McEwen (1997), Lin and McNichols (1998a,b), Michaely and Womack
(1999), and Rajan and Servaes (1997).
49
Consistent with this hypothesis, Mikhail et al. (1999) document a significant relation between
analyst turnover and relative forecast accuracy.
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 157

Michaely and Womack (1999), Dugar and Nathan (1995), and Dechow et al.
(1999), among others, offer evidence consistent with the hypothesis.
An alternative interpretation for the observed bias in affiliated analysts’
forecasts is as follows. The determination of affiliated analysts is not
exogenous. Suppose there are N analysts, and all of them are assumed to
issue unbiased forecasts. Assume furthermore that they independently issue N
forecasts at time t for a firm i: Firm i’s management is interested in an
investment-banking relation with one of the analyst’s firm because it would like
to issue new equity. Firm i might retain the investment-banking firm of the
analyst issuing the highest of the N forecasts. That is, the firm’s choice of the
investment-banking analyst is likely in part a function of who is most bullish
about the firm’s prospects.50 If the N forecasts were issued independently and
since all the analysts are assumed to issue unbiased forecasts on average, the
order statistic of the cross-sectional distribution of analysts’ forecasts (or a
forecast from the high end of the distribution) selected by the firm’s
management will ex post appear optimistic. I believe the challenge is to
discriminate between the above explanation and the incentive-based opportu-
nistic-forecast explanation.
Second, Lim (1998) and Das et al. (1998) argue that analysts might
issue optimistic forecasts to gain increased access to information from
management, especially in cases where the information asymmetry between
the management and the investment community is high. Analysts’ investment
in developing better relations with firms’ management improves the flow of
information from managers as well as helps obtain more investment banking
and brokerage business, and potentially more brokerage commissions from
clients. Lim (1998) and Das et al. (1998) recognize that forecast bias is bad, but
management might reward optimism by funneling information to the analyst.
This information is helpful in improving forecast accuracy. The benefit to
analysts is greatest when prior uncertainty is high. So analysts trade-off bias
against information from management, which reduces the variance of the
forecast error. This leads to an interior equilibrium, rather than a corner
solution of huge optimistic bias.51 The hypothesis also generates a cross-
sectional prediction that the bias would be increasing in variables that proxy
for prior uncertainty and information asymmetry (e.g., firm size, and growth
opportunities). Evidence in Lim (1998) and Das et al. (1998) is consistent with
the hypothesis.

50
While this provides an incentive for all analysts to be optimistic, recall that I have assumed
unbiased forecasts. The argument I make here is unchanged even if the analysts are on average
assumed to make optimistically biased forecasts. If this were the case, the affiliated analyst is
expected to appear more optimistically biased than the rest.
51
See Laster et al. (1999) for a similar argument using publicity from their forecasts traded-off
against accuracy as a motivation for analysts’ optimistic bias.
158 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

Third, Gu and Wu (2000) hypothesize that the observed forecast bias results
from analysts’ incentives in the presence of earnings skewness. They argue that
optimistic bias is rational and expected because analysts strive to minimize
mean absolute forecast error. The median of a skewed distribution minimizes
the mean absolute forecast error. Thus, if the realized earnings distribution is
negatively skewed and if analysts seek to minimize the absolute forecast error,
not mean squared error, then forecasts will be optimistically biased. Evidence
in Gu and Wu (2000) is consistent with their skewness explanation. While Gu
and Wu (2000) offer an interesting explanation, in their setting both optimistic
and pessimistic biases are explained so long as analysts forecast median
earnings. Therefore, if skewed earnings distribution suggests extreme surprising
outcomes, then in good economic periods analysts ex post turn out to be
pessimistic and they ex post turn out to be optimistic in bad economic times.
Gu and Wu (2000) cannot discriminate between the above explanation and
their hypothesis that analysts have an incentive to forecast the median.
Finally, Abarbanell and Lehavy (2000b) propose that it is management’s
incentive to take earnings baths that largely contributes to the observed
optimistic bias in analysts’ forecasts. That is, unlike the previous explanations,
Abarbanell and Lehavy (2000b) argue that the bias has nothing to do with
analysts’ incentives or cognitive biases (see below). Instead, they show that
earnings management observations disproportionately impact the estimated
bias, which prior research seeks to explain on the basis of analysts’ incentives
and/or cognitive biases.
Cognitive-bias explanations: Cognitive-bias explanations for analysts’ opti-
mism have been proposed mainly to explain anomalous security-return
evidence that suggests market inefficiency in long-horizon returns. Evidence
of apparent market overreaction to past good and bad price performance (i.e.,
a profitable contrarian investment strategy) prompted a cognitive bias in
analysts’ forecasts as an explanation. Drawing upon the behavioral theories of
Tversky and Kahneman (1984) and others, DeBondt and Thaler (1985, 1987,
1990), Capstaff et al. (1997), and DeBondt (1992) propose a cognitive-bias
explanation for analysts’ forecast optimism. Specifically, they hypothesize that
analysts systematically overreact to (earnings) information, which imparts an
optimistic bias in analysts’ forecasts. However, in order for an optimistic bias
in analysts’ forecasts to arise, there must be some asymmetry in overreaction
such that analysts’ overreaction to good news is not fully offset by their
overreaction to bad news. Elton et al. (1984) argue that analysts overestimate
firms performing well and Easterwood and Nutt (1999) document evidence
that analysts overreact to good earnings information, but underreact to bad
earnings information. The source of asymmetry in the analysts’ overreaction is
not fully understood in the literature. The asymmetry also makes it difficult to
explain the post-earnings-announcement drift because reversal in the reaction
to good news earnings is not observed.
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 159

Research also examines whether there is a cognitive-bias-induced over-


reaction and optimism in analysts’ forecasts (see Klein, 1990; Abarbanell,
1991) as well as whether the apparent security-return overreaction52 is a result
of the market believing analysts’ cognitive-bias-induced overreacting and
biased forecasts (e.g., LaPorta, 1996; Dechow and Sloan, 1997). Klein’s (1990)
evidence is inconsistent with overreaction in analysts’ forecasts and Abarbanell
(1991) infers underreaction to earnings information, which is consistent with
the post-earnings-announcement drift. In recent work, Abarbanell and Lehavy
(2000b) fail to find evidence consistent with cognitive bias inducing optimistic
bias in analysts’ forecasts. I defer the security-return evidence to Section 4
where I discuss research on market efficiency with respect to analysts’ long-
horizon forecasts.
Other explanations: In addition to the above incentives-based and cognitive-
bias-related explanations for analysts’ optimism, at least three other explana-
tions are offered in the literature. These are (see Brown, 1998): herd behavior
(Trueman, 1994); low earnings predictability (Huberts and Fuller, 1995); and
analysts prefer to withhold unfavorable forecasts (Affleck-Graves et al., 1990;
McNichols and O’Brien, 1997).
4.1.2.4.8. Properties of individual analyst’s forecasts. Research in this area
almost invariably has a descriptive component that documents properties of
individual analyst’s forecasts. Other research analyzes properties of individual
analyst’s forecasts in the context of analysts’ economic incentives in issuing
earnings forecasts, i.e., the costs and benefits of issuing accurate or biased
forecasts. The latter is more interesting, but also more difficult.
Research on the properties of individual analysts’ forecasts can be
categorized into three streams. First, there is research on cross-sectional
variation in and determinants of analysts’ forecast accuracy. Second, research
examines whether analysts’ forecasts are efficient in using all the information
available at the time of their forecasts. Third, there is research on systematic
differences in the properties of analysts’ forecasts between groups of analysts
(e.g., affiliated versus unaffiliated analysts), which might be related to
differential economic incentives facing the groups of analysts.
4.1.2.4.9. Differential forecast accuracy and its determinants. The early
literature fails to find differential forecast accuracy among analysts (see Brown
and Rozeff, 1980; O’Brien, 1990; Butler and Lang, 1991). Failure to control for
the confounding effect of forecast recency on forecast accuracy contributed to
the lack of finding significant differential forecast accuracy. Using larger data
sets and better controls for forecast horizon, Sinha et al. (1997) conclude that
analysts differ in terms of their forecast accuracy. They show that even in hold

52
See DeBondt and Thaler (1985, 1987), Chan (1988), Ball and Kothari (1989), Chopra et al.
(1992), Ball et al. (1995), and Fama and French (1995) for research examining whether investors
and the stock market overreact to information over long horizons.
160 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

out samples (i.e., an ex ante analysis), superior forecasters based on past


performance outperform other analysts in forecast accuracy (also see Stickel
(1992), for the forecast superiority of the Institutional Investor All American
Research Team vis-"a-vis other analysts). Sinha et al. also find that poor
performers do not necessarily repeat poor performance. Their evidence is
consistent with economic Darwinism in that superior forecasters survive, but
poor performers are possibly weeded out in the marketplace.
Recent examples of research examining the determinants of analyst
forecast superiority include Mikhail et al. (1997), Jacob et al. (1999), and
Clement (1999). The evidence in these studies suggests that experience (or
learning), the size of the brokerage firm that an analyst works for, and the
complexity of the analyst’s task (number of firms and industries followed by an
analyst) affect forecast accuracy. The evidence on experience appears mixed in
part because of data problems. For example, data are available only since 1984,
so even if some analysts were experienced at the start of the data availability
year, they are coded as no more experienced as a novice. In addition, inferences
about the effect of long experience are confounded by potential survivor bias
problems.
4.1.2.4.10. Efficiency of analysts’ forecasts. A number of studies show that
analysts’ forecasts are inefficient in the sense that they do not fully incorporate
past information available at the time of their forecasts. Evidence in Lys and
Sohn (1990), Klein (1990), and Abarbanell (1991) suggests that analysts
underreact to past information reflected in prices. There is evidence of serial
correlation in forecast revisions of individual analysts surveyed by Zacks
Investment Research (see Lys and Sohn, 1990), in the Value Line forecasts (see
Mendenhall, 1991) and in the I/B/E/S consensus forecasts (see Ali et al., 1992).
This research examines whether analysts’ underreaction to past information
and/or earnings information is a potential explanation for the post-earnings-
announcement drift (also see Abarbanell and Bernard, 1992).
The inefficiency of analysts’ forecasts in incorporating available information
in revising their forecasts raises the question of an analyst’s incentive to provide
an accurate forecast. Stated differently, is the cost of incorporating all the
information outweighed by potential benefits? This requires better knowledge
of (or proxies for) the cost and reward structure of a financial analyst.
4.1.2.4.11. Differences in forecast accuracy across classes of analysts. Recent
research examines whether economic incentives motivate different classes of
analysts (e.g., analysts affiliated with a brokerage firm that has an investment-
banking relation with the firm whose earnings are being forecast versus
unaffiliated analysts). This research, discussed earlier, examines both differ-
ences in forecast accuracy across the classes of analysts and security price
performance in an attempt to ascertain whether capital markets are fixated on
biased analysts’ forecasts. I will revisit the issues surrounding market efficiency
below.
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 161

4.1.3. Methodological issues and capital markets research


There are several issues involved in drawing statistical inferences in capital
markets research. Although econometric in nature, some methodological
research appears in the accounting literature because it addresses issues that are
unique to capital markets research in accounting. The uniqueness often stems
either from the properties of accounting data or from choice of research design
(e.g., levels regressions). There is a voluminous body of research that examines
econometric issues germane to capital markets research. These issues are
important and have a tremendous bearing on the inferences we draw from the
statistical analysis presented in the research. However, to keep the review
focused, I survey this research only by way of listing the main issues and refer
the reader to the relevant literature for technical details. The main issues
include:

(i) bias in test statistics because of cross-correlation in the data or regression


residuals (see Schipper and Thompson, 1983; Collins and Dent, 1984;
Sefcik and Thompson, 1986; Bernard, 1987; Christie, 1987; Kothari and
Wasley, 1989; Brav, 2000; Mitchell and Stafford, 2000);
(ii) price and return regression models (see Lev and Ohlson, 1982; Christie,
1987; Landsman and Magliolo, 1988; Kothari and Zimmerman, 1995;
Barth and Kallapur, 1996; Barth and Clinch, 1999; Easton, 1998; Brown
et al., 1999; Holthausen and Watts, 2001); and
(iii) comparing the information content of alternative models, e.g., comparing
the association of earnings versus cash flows with stock returns (see
Davidson and MacKinnon, 1981; Cramer, 1987; Vuong, 1989; Dechow,
1994; Biddle et al., 1995; Biddle and Seow, 1996; Dechow et al., 1998b;
Ball et al., 2000).

4.1.4. Models of discretionary and non-discretionary accruals


4.1.4.1. Motivation. I review methodological research on models of discre-
tionary and non-discretionary accruals because of their preeminent role in
researchers’ ability to draw correct inferences in capital markets and other
research in accounting. Discretionary accruals and earnings management are
used synonymously in the literature. Schipper (1989) defines earnings
management as ‘‘purposeful intervention in the external reporting process,
with the intent of obtaining some private gain to managers or shareholders’’.
The discretionary accrual models split total accruals into a discretionary
component, which serves as a proxy for earnings management, and a non-
discretionary portion. The non-discretionary accrual together with operating
cash flows is the non-discretionary portion of reported earnings. At least three
streams of research use discretionary accrual models.
First, discretionary accrual models are used in tests of contracting-
and political-cost-based hypotheses about management’s incentives to
162 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

manipulate accounting numbers (i.e., opportunistic use of accruals). Alter-


natively, this research hypothesizes that firms choose accounting policies or
include discretionary accruals in earnings to convey management’s private
information about the firm’s prospects or to more accurately reflect the firm’s
periodic performance, i.e., the efficient contracting use of accruals (see
Holthausen and Leftwich, 1983; Watts and Zimmerman, 1990; Holthausen,
1990; Healy and Palepu, 1993). This body of research is usually not in the
capital markets area.
Second, using market efficiency as a maintained hypothesis, many studies
test the efficient contracting and opportunism hypotheses by correlating
earnings components with stock returns. This research is frequently aimed at
testing the information content or association with security returns of new
mandated recognition or disclosure standards of accounting. Examples of this
research include studies examining whether banks’ disclosures of fair values of
investments and loans contain value-relevant information (see, e.g., Barth,
1994; Barth et al., 1996; Nelson, 1996). Alternatively, research examines
properties of voluntarily disclosed accounting data to test the efficient
contracting and opportunism hypotheses (e.g., Beaver and Engel, 1996;
Wahlen, 1994). Beaver and Venkatachalam (1999) is an example of research
that simultaneously tests the information content and opportunism hypoth-
eses, i.e., it allows for both non-strategic noise and opportunistic accrual
manipulation.
Third, a recent popular area of research tests the joint hypothesis of market
inefficiency and accrual manipulation with a capital market motivation, e.g., an
incentive to manipulate accruals upward in periods prior to stock issues (see
Dechow et al., 1996; Jiambalvo, 1996). Recent developments in financial
economics and accounting, which are suggestive of informational inefficiency
of the capital markets, have fueled this research. The research tests whether
there is a positive association between current manipulated (or discretionary)
accruals and subsequent risk-adjusted abnormal stock returns. Examples of
research in this area include Sloan (1996), Teoh et al. (1998a–c), Rangan
(1998), and Ali et al. (1999).

4.1.4.2. Discretionary accrual models. There are five well-known time-series


models of discretionary accruals in the literature.53 These are: the DeAngelo
(1986) model, the Healy (1985) model, the industry model used in Dechow and
Sloan (1991), the Jones (1991) model, and the modified-Jones model by
Dechow et al. (1995). Of these only the Jones and modified-Jones models are
commonly used in research in part because they outperform the rest in terms of
specification and power (see Dechow et al., 1995). Thomas and Zhang (1999)

53
Strictly speaking, they are models of non-discretionary accruals and the residual (or the
intercept plus the residual) from each model is an estimate of discretionary accruals.
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 163

dispute Dechow et al.’s finding and conclude ‘‘Only the Kang-Sivaramakrish-


nan model, which is coincidentally the least popular model, performs
moderately well.’’ Kang and Sivaramakrishnan (1995) employ an instrumental
variable approach to estimate discretionary accruals.
Moreover, cross-sectional estimation of the Jones model (see DeFond and
Jiambalvo, 1994; Subramanyam, 1996b) has replaced the original time-series
formulation of the model in terms of recent application. DeFond and
Jiambalvo (1994), Subramanyam (1996b) and other studies have legitimized
the cross-sectional estimation. Their evidence suggests the performance based
on cross-sectional estimation is no worse than that using time-series estimation
of the Jones and modified-Jones models. Cross-sectional estimation imposes
milder data availability requirements for a firm to be included for analysis than
time-series estimation. This mitigates potential survivor bias problems. The
precision of the estimates is also likely higher in cross-sectional estimation
because of larger sample sizes than the number of time-series observations for
an individual firm. The downside of cross-sectional estimation is that cross-
sectional variation in the parameter estimates is sacrificed. However,
conditional cross-sectional estimation is a good remedy for the problem (see
previous discussion in the context of time-series properties of annual earnings
forecasts in Section 4.1.2, and Fama and French, 2000; Dechow et al., 1999).

4.1.4.3. Evaluation of discretionary accruals models. An influential study by


Dechow et al. (1995) evaluates the power and specification of alternative
discretionary accrual models. Their conclusion that the ‘‘modified version of
the model developed by Jones (1991) exhibits the most power in detecting
earnings management’’ (Dechow et al., 1995, p. 193) serves as the basis for the
widespread use of the modified-Jones model. Dechow et al. (1995, p. 193) also
conclude that, while ‘‘all of the models appear well specified when applied to a
random sample’’, ‘‘all models reject the null hypothesis of no earnings
management at rates exceeding the specified test levels when applied to samples
of firms with extreme financial performance’’. Finally, Dechow et al. (1995,
p. 193) find that ‘‘the models all generate tests of low power for earnings
managementy’’.
Since earnings management studies almost invariably examine samples of
firms that have experienced unusual performance, the most relevant conclusion
from Dechow et al. (1995) is that the discretionary accrual models are seriously
misspecified. The misspecification arises because the magnitude of normal
accruals, i.e., non-discretionary or expected accruals, is correlated with past
(and contemporaneous) firm performance. The dependence arises for two
reasons. First, as discussed in Section 4.1 on the time-series properties of
earnings, firm performance conditional on past performance does not follow a
random walk. Second, both operating accruals and operating cash flows are
strongly mean reverting (see Dechow (1994) for evidence, and Dechow et al.
164 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

(1998a, b) for a model that explains the correlation structure), which means
these variables are not serially uncorrelated. However, none of the five
discretionary accrual models used in the literature explicitly captures accruals’
serial correlation property, so estimated discretionary accruals are biased and
contaminated with non-discretionary accruals. Evidence in Guay et al. (1996),
who use market-based tests, and Hansen (1999), who examines the behavior of
future earnings, suggests that the extent of the non-discretionary accrual
component in estimated discretionary accruals is large. Thomas and Zhang’s
(1999) conclusion is still stronger. They infer that the commonly used models
‘‘provide little ability to predict accruals’’.
I now turn attention to power of the tests that use discretionary accruals.
Power of a test is the frequency with which the null hypothesis is rejected when
it is false. In assessing the power of the discretionary accrual models, there are
two relevant issues. First, if a test is misspecified (i.e., rejection frequency under
the null exceeds the significance level of the test, e.g., 5%), statements about the
power of the test are not particularly meaningful. Second, assuming that the
estimated discretionary accruals are adjusted for bias due to past performance
or other reasons, I would argue that the discretionary accrual models yield tests
of high, not low power. This conclusion contrasts with Dechow et al. (1995).
They examine the power of the tests using individual securities, i.e., sample size
is one. Since almost all research studies use samples in excess of 50–100,
assuming independence, the standard deviation of the mean discretionary
accrual is an order of magnitude smaller than that in Dechow et al. (1995).54
Therefore, in most research settings, the power is considerably higher than
reported in Dechow et al. (1995). Not surprisingly, the null of zero
discretionary accruals is often rejected in empirical research.

4.1.4.4. Future research: Better models of discretionary accruals and better


tests. The misspecification of and bias in the discretionary accrual models
suggest that inferences about earnings management might not be accurate.
Accruals should be modeled as a function of a firm’s immediate past economic
performance, so that discretionary accruals can be more accurately isolated
(see Kaplan, 1985; McNichols and Wilson, 1988; Guay et al., 1996; Healy,
1996; Dechow et al., 1998a). Shocks to a firm’s economic performance affect
normal accruals as well as serve as a strong motivation to managers to
manipulate accruals both opportunistically and to convey information. This
complicates the researcher’s task of separating discretionary from non-
discretionary accruals.
Collins and Hribar (2000b) point to another problem in identifying not only
discretionary accruals, but total accruals as well. They show that a researcher’s
54
Even if the standard deviation is estimated with a correction for cross-sectional dependence, it
is likely to be considerably smaller than that for a sample of one firm as in Dechow et al. (1995).
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 165

estimate of total accruals using the balance sheet approach instead of taking
information directly from a cash flow statement is economically significantly
biased in the presence of mergers and acquisitions and discontinued
operations.55 Precise information on cash flows and accruals has become
available only after the Statement of Financial Accounting Standard No. 95
became effective in 1987, and many research studies use the balance sheet
approach even in the recent period. The misestimation of total accruals
increases the error in estimating discretionary accruals and potentially biases
the estimated discretionary accrual. If the test sample firms are more active in
mergers and acquisitions or have discontinued operations more frequently than
the control sample firms, then Collins and Hribar (2000b) analysis suggests the
inferences might be incorrect. Their replication of the studies examining
seasoned equity offering firms’ accrual manipulation reveals that the bias in
estimated discretionary accruals largely accounts for the apparent manipula-
tion documented in Teoh et al. (1998a) and elsewhere.
Another complicating factor is whether discretionary accruals are motivated
by managerial opportunism or efficient contracting considerations. Subrama-
nyam (1996b) reports results of the tests of estimated discretionary accruals’
association with returns and with future earnings and cash flow performance.
He concludes that discretionary accruals are on average informative, not
opportunistic.56 In contrast, portfolios representing firms with extreme
amounts of accruals, which are likely to be flagged as extreme discretionary
accrual portfolios, are suggestive of accrual manipulation with a motivation to
(successfully) fool capital markets (see Sloan, 1996; Xie, 1997; Collins and
Hribar, 2000a, b). Because the opportunism and efficient contracting motiva-
tions are likely linked to managers’ incentives and firm performance, it
behooves researchers to link the development of a discretionary accrual model
to firm performance.
Simultaneous with the development of better economic models of discre-
tionary accruals, improved tests using discretionary accruals are required. The
demand for better tests arises for at least three reasons. First, research using
discretionary accruals frequently examines multi-year performance, whereas
methodological studies like Dechow et al. (1995) examine discretionary accrual
performance over only one year. Second, test statistics calculated assuming
cross-sectional independence might be misspecified especially when a
researcher examines performance over multi-year horizons. See Brav (2000),
for evidence on bias in tests of long-horizon security-return performance using

55
Also see Drtina and Largay (1985), Huefner et al. (1989), and Bahnson et al. (1996).
56
However, Subramanyam (1996b) finds that the coefficient on discretionary accruals is smaller
than that on non-discretionary accruals, which is consistent with discretionary accruals being
partially opportunistic or that they are less permanent than non-discretionary accruals.
166 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

tests that ignore positive cross-sectional dependence (also see Collins and Dent,
1984; Bernard, 1987).
Third, test statistics for multi-year performance might be misspecified
because long-horizon performance is likely right skewed (or might exhibit some
other form of non-normality) and not all sample firms survive, so there might
be a survivor bias. While a t-test using a large sample size is quite robust to
non-normality, the combination of skewness (or other forms of non-normality)
and cross-sectional dependence might contribute to test misspecification. Use
of Bootstrap standard errors would be an option that is worth examining to
tackle problems arising from both non-normality and survivor biases.
Fourth, the percentage of firms surviving the multi-year test period
in a typical research study is considerably smaller than 100%. For example,
Teoh et al. (1998c) study a sample of 1514 IPOs for a six-year post-IPO
period. In their tests based on the return-on-sales performance measure
using a matched-pair sample, the number of firms surviving in the sixth
post-IPO year is only 288, i.e., 19% of the original sample (see Teoh et al.,
1998c, Table 2, panel C). Such a large reduction in sample size is not unique to
the Teoh et al. (1998c) study. Surprisingly, however, there is no systematic
evidence in the literature on whether such a large degree of attrition imparts a
bias. Moreover, in a matched-pair research design, is the attrition due more
often to the lack of survival of test firms or matched control firms? Does this
matter?
Finally, evidence in Barber and Lyon (1996) suggests that use of a
performance-matched control firm yields unbiased measures of abnormal
operating performance in random and non-random samples. Use of
performance-matched samples is common in research examining discretionary
accruals. However, a systematic study of the specification and power of the
tests of discretionary accruals using performance-matched control firm samples
is missing in the literature.

4.1.4.5. Capital market research implications. Of direct relevance in this review


of the capital markets literature is the question whether capital market studies
are affected by problems with the discretionary accrual models. I believe they
are. Let me give one example. Consider the hypothesis in Aharony et al. (1993),
Friedlan (1994), Teoh et al. (1998b, c), and other studies that in the years
leading up to an IPO, management biases financial performance upward
through positive discretionary accruals.
First, management’s IPO decision is endogenous. It is likely to be taken in
the light of superior past and expected future economic performance and a
need for cash for investments to meet the anticipated demand for the
company’s products and services. However, high growth is mean reverting.
One reason is that a portion of high growth often results from transitory
earnings due to a non-discretionary (or neutral) application of GAAP. Thus, a
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 167

portion of the subsequent performance reversal is expected and may not be due
to discretionary accruals.
Second, the popularly used modified-Jones model treats all of the increase in
accounts receivables as discretionary (see Teoh et al., 1998c; Dechow et al.,
1995).57 Thus, legitimate revenue growth on credit is treated as discretionary or
fraudulent (see Beneish, 1998). This means, since extreme revenue growth is
mean reverting, the modified-Jones model exacerbates the bias in estimated
discretionary accrual in the post-IPO period.
The above example suggests the possibility of bias in estimated discretionary
accruals (also see Beneish, 1998). More careful tests are warranted to draw
definitive conclusions. In addition to documenting evidence of discretionary
accruals, researchers correlate the estimated discretionary accruals with
contemporaneous and subsequent security returns to test market efficiency. I
defer to Section 4.4 a discussion of potential consequences of misspecified
discretionary accrual models for inferences about the market’s fixation on
reported accounting numbers in the context of tests of market efficiency. As
noted above, the capital market motivation for accrual manipulation has
assumed great importance in the light of evidence suggesting capital markets
might be informationally inefficient.

4.2. Alternative accounting performance measures

Starting with Ball and Brown (1968), many studies use association with stock
returns to compare alternative accounting performance measures like historical
cost earnings, current cost earnings, residual earnings, operating cash flows,
and so on. A major motivation for research comparing alternative performance
measures is perceived deficiencies in some of the performance measures. For
example, Lev (1989), the AICPA Special Committee on Financial Reporting
(1994), also known as the Jenkins Committee, and compensation consultants
like Stern, Stewart & Company (Stewart, 1991) all argue that the historical cost
financial reporting model produces earnings of ‘‘low quality’’ vis-"a-vis firm
performance.
Researchers’ explicit or implicit use of the term ‘‘earnings quality’’ is either in
the context of examining whether earnings information is useful to investors
for valuation or in evaluating managers’ performance. Capital-markets
research typically assumes that an accounting performance measure serves

57
Teoh et al. (1998c, p. 192) describe their estimation of discretionary accruals as follows: ‘‘ywe
first estimate expected current accruals by cross-sectionally regressing current (not total) accruals
on only the change in sales revenues. The expected current accruals is calculated using the estimated
coefficients in the fitted equation after subtracting the change in trade receivables from the change
in sales revenues. The residual of current accruals is the abnormal current accruals’’.
168 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

either the managerial performance measure role or the valuation information


role. A managerial performance measure indicates the value added by the
manager’s efforts or actions in a period, whereas a measure designed to provide
information useful for valuation gives an indication of the firm’s economic
income or the change in shareholders’ wealth. The former has a contracting
motivation and the latter has an informational or valuation motivation.
Although I expect the performance measure with the contracting motivation to
be positively correlated with the performance measure designed with a
valuation motivation, I do not expect the two to be the same (see discussion
below). Therefore, I believe the research design comparing alternative
performance measures should be influenced by the assumed choice of the
objective.

4.2.1. Review of past research


Early research on association studies (e.g., Ball and Brown, 1968), which is
reviewed in Section 3, firmly establishes that earnings reflect some of the
information in security prices. However, this early research did not perform
statistical tests comparing alternative performance measures, since the primary
concern was to ascertain whether there is any overlap between earnings
information and the information reflected in security prices.
In the 1980s several studies statistically compared stock returns’ association
with earnings, accruals, and cash flows. This research includes long-window
association studies by Rayburn (1986), Bernard and Stober (1989), Bowen et al.
(1986, 1987), and Livnat and Zarowin (1990) and short-window tests by
Wilson (1986, 1987). Apart from providing a formal test, their motivation is
that previous research used a relatively crude measure of cash flows. They also
use more sophisticated expectation models to more accurately isolate the
unexpected components of earnings (accruals) and cash flows, because returns
in an efficient market only reflect the unanticipated components. The
conclusion from most of these studies is that there is incremental information
in accruals beyond cash flows.
In this heavily researched area of the relative information content of
earnings and cash flows, Dechow’s (1994) innovation is in developing cross-
sectional predictions about the conditions that make earnings relatively more
informative about a firm’s economic performance than cash flows (also see
Dechow et al., 1998a). Dechow (1994) argues that the emphasis in previous
research on unexpected components of the performance measures is misplaced.
She views performance measures as primarily serving a contracting purpose.
Therefore, she is not interested in a research design that (i) attempts to obtain
the most accurate proxy for the anticipated component of a performance
measure and (ii) correlates the unanticipated component with stock returns.
She argues that managers’ compensation contracts almost invariably specify
only one summary performance variable (e.g., earnings) and that the contracts
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 169

rarely specify it in terms of the innovation in the variable (e.g., unexpected


earnings). Dechow (1994) therefore forcefully argues that tests evaluating
alternative performance measures should seek to identify the best alternative
measure, regardless of whether each measure provides incremental associa-
tion.58

4.2.2. Current interest


Recent research examines new performance measures that the FASB
requires to be disclosed (e.g., comprehensive income compared to primary
earnings per share by Dhaliwal et al., 1999). Alternatively, research compares
different measures advocated by compensation consultants like Stern Stewart
& Company against earnings (e.g., EVA compared against earnings by Biddle
et al., 1997) or measures that have evolved in different industries (e.g., Vincent
(1999) and Fields et al. (1998) examine alternative performance measures used
by real estate investment trusts, REITs). Evidence from these studies suggests
that performance measures that have evolved voluntarily in an unregulated
environment (e.g., performance measures in the REIT industry) are more likely
to be incrementally informative than those mandated by regulation (e.g.,
comprehensive income).

4.2.3. Unresolved issues and future research


4.2.3.1. Correlation with returns as a criterion. Research evaluating alternative
performance measures frequently uses association with security returns as the
criterion to determine the best measure. Going back to Gonedes and Dopuch
(1974), a long-standing issue has been whether association with stock returns is
the right test. Holthausen and Watts (2001) offer an in-depth analysis of the
issue as well. Research evaluating alternative performance measures must
recognize that the objective of a particular performance measure should
influence the choice of a test. Consider the scenario in which the performance
measure and financial statements are geared towards facilitating debt
contracts. It is not clear that a performance measure that seeks to measure
the change in the value of the firm’s growth options, which would be reflected

58
Dechow (1994) proposes the Vuong (1989) test, which, in substance, is a test of difference
between the adjusted explanatory powers of two models, each with one (set of) explanatory
variable(s), but the same dependent variable in both the models. Following Dechow (1994), the
Vuong (1989) test has become the industry standard. However, there are alternatives to the Vuong
test, as developed in Biddle et al. (1995), or the Davidson and MacKinnon (1981) non-nested J-test.
Biddle and Seow (1996) claim that the Biddle et al. (1995) test’s specification and power are at least
as good as or better than the Vuong and J-tests in the presence of heteroskedastic and cross-
correlated data (see Dechow et al., 1998b). Another alternative is to compare r-squares of two
models with or without the same dependent variable using the standard error of the r-square as
derived in Cramer (1987). This approach is helpful in making comparisons across countries (see for
example, Ball et al., 2000) or across industries.
170 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

in the change in the firm’s market capitalization, is of greatest interest to the


firm’s debt-holders.
As another example, if the objective of a performance measure is to report
the net value of the delivered output in the past period, then it may not
necessarily correlate highly with stock returns (see, for example, Lee, 1999;
Barclay et al., 1999). The reason is that return for a period reflects the
consequences of only the unanticipated component of the period’s delivered
output and revisions in expectations about future output. Once we accept that
highest correlation with returns is neither a necessary nor a sufficient condition
in comparing alternative performance measures, then incremental information
content of a measure becomes a questionable criterion in evaluating alternative
performance measures.

4.2.3.2. Level or unanticipated component of a performance measure. As noted


earlier, Dechow (1994) argues that most management compensation contracts
use only one accounting performance measure and that the measure is not the
unexpected component of the performance variable. She therefore advocates
against using the unexpected component of the performance measure. This
suggests correlating the level of the performance measure with the level of
price. Use of beginning-of-the-period price as a deflator for both dependent
and independent variables is motivated by the econometric benefits (e.g., fewer
correlated omitted variables, lesser heteroscedasticity and reduced serial
correlation) that follow from using price as a deflator (see Christie, 1987).
However, Ohlson (1991), Ohlson and Shroff (1992), and Kothari (1992) show
that, because price embeds expectations about future performance, it serves not
only as a deflator with econometric benefits, but it in effect correlates returns
with the unexpected component of the performance measure. Therefore, if the
objective is to focus on the total performance measure, not just its unexpected
component, then should it be correlated with returns or prices? Correlation
with prices indeed correlates the entire performance measure with prices
because current price contains information in the surprise as well as the
anticipated components of the performance measure (Kothari and Zimmer-
man, 1995).59 The down side of correlating prices with a performance measure
is that there can be severe econometric problems due to heteroscedasticity and
correlated omitted variables (see Gonedes and Dopuch, 1974; Schwert, 1981;
Christie, 1987; Holthausen, 1994; Kothari and Zimmerman, 1995; Barth and
Kallapur, 1996; Skinner, 1996; Shevlin, 1996; Easton, 1998; Holthausen and
Watts, 2001).

59
For other advantages of using price regressions, also see Lev and Ohlson (1982) and Landsman
and Magliolo (1988).
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 171

4.2.3.3. Correlation with future cash flows. An important stated objective of


financial accounting standards is that financial information should be helpful
to users in assessing the amount, timing, and uncertainty of future cash flows
(see FASB, 1978). An operational interpretation of this criterion is to compare
performance measures on the basis of their correlation with future cash flows.
Some recent research examines earnings’ correlation with future cash flows (see
Finger, 1994; Dechow et al., 1998a; Barth et al., 1999). If a researcher employs
correlation with future cash flows as the criterion to evaluate alternative
performance measures, then the performance measure’s correlation with prices
would serve as a complementary test. The benefit of using price is that it
contains information about expected future cash flows in an efficient market,
which means the vector of expected future cash flows is collapsed into a single
number, price. Of course, the trade-off is econometric problems in using price-
level regressions (see Holthausen and Watts, 2001) and the effect of discount
rates on price, holding cash flows constant.

4.3. Valuation and fundamental analysis research

This section begins with a discussion of the motivation for research on


fundamental analysis (Section 4.3.1). Section 4.3.2 explains the role of
fundamental analysis as a branch of capital markets research in accounting.
Section 4.3.3 describes the dividend discounting, earnings capitalization, and
residual income valuation models that are used frequently in accounting
research. This section also reviews the empirical research based on these
valuation models. Section 4.3.4 reviews the fundamental analysis research that
examines financial statement ratios to forecast earnings and to identify
mispriced stocks.

4.3.1. Motivation for fundamental analysis


The principal motivation for fundamental analysis research and its use in
practice is to identify mispriced securities for investment purposes. However,
even in an efficient market there is an important role for fundamental analysis.
It aids our understanding of the determinants of value, which facilitates
investment decisions and valuation of non-publicly traded securities. Regard-
less of the motivation, fundamental analysis seeks to determine firms’ intrinsic
values. The analysis almost invariably estimates the correlation between the
intrinsic value and the market value using data for a sample of publicly traded
firms. The correlation between market values and intrinsic value might be
estimated directly using intrinsic values or indirectly by regressing market
values on determinants of the intrinsic value. In this section, I examine the
latter. The last step in fundamental analysis is to evaluate the success or failure
of intrinsic valuation on the basis of the magnitude of risk-adjusted returns to a
172 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

trading strategy implemented in periods subsequent to intrinsic valuation. This


is a test of market efficiency and I discuss research on this topic in Section 4.4.

4.3.2. Is fundamental analysis accounting research?


To better answer the question whether research on fundamental analysis
should be considered as part of accounting research,60 first compare the
information set in financial statements with the set incorporated in market
values. Since market value is the discounted present value of expected future
net cash flows, forecasts of future revenues, expenses, earnings, and cash flows
are the crux of valuation. Lee (1999, p. 3) concludes that the ‘‘essential task in
valuation is forecasting. It is the forecast that breathes life into a valuation
model’’. However, in most economically interesting settings (e.g., IPOs, high-
growth firms, and efficiency enhancing and/or synergy motivated mergers),
financial statements prepared according to current GAAP are likely to be
woefully inadequate as summary statistics for the firm’s anticipated future
sales, and therefore, for predicted future earnings information that is
embedded in the current market values. Therefore, unless current accounting
rules are changed dramatically, it is unlikely that financial statements in
themselves will be particularly useful or accurate indicators of market values.
The reliability principle that underlies GAAP is often cited as the reason why
financial statements do not contain forward-looking information that affects
market values. For example, Sloan (1998, p. 135) surmises ‘‘It seems that it is
the reliability criterion that makes the difference between the myriad of
variables that can help forecast value and the much smaller subset of variables
that are included in GAAP.’’ While the reliability principle is important, I
believe the revenue recognition principle is just as, if not more, important. The
revenue recognition principle reduces financial statements to answering the
question ‘‘What have you done for me lately?’’ Thus, even if future revenue
were to be reliably anticipated (at least a big fraction of it can be for many
firms), still none of it would be recognized. Since market values and changes in
those values depend crucially on news about future revenues, current GAAP
financial statements are unlikely to be particularly timely indicators of value.
In spite of a lack of timely information in financial statements, I emphasize
the following. First, lack of timeliness in itself does not imply a change in
GAAP with respect to the revenue recognition principle (or the reliability
principle) is warranted; I am merely describing current GAAP. There are
economic sources of demand for historical information in financial statements
and therefore for the revenue recognition principle, but that is beyond the

60
This question might be asked of some other research as well (e.g., market efficiency research in
accounting). However, my casual observation is that this question is raised more frequently in the
context of fundamental analysis.
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 173

scope of this review. Second, there is still some information conveyed


by financial reports that is not already in the public domain, as seen from
the event study research on the information content of accounting. The
association study and the earnings response coefficient literatures seek to
ascertain whether accounting captures some of the information that affects
security prices and how timely are accounting reports in reflecting that
information. As discussed earlier, one concern in this literature is whether
GAAP and/or managerial discretion render accounting numbers devoid of
value-relevant information.
Given the historical nature of information in financial statements, mean-
ingful fundamental analysis research requires accounting researchers to expand
the definition of capital markets research to include research using forecasted
earnings information for fundamental analysis. Lee (1999) offers a spirited
defense of this viewpoint. He concludes (p. 17) ‘‘User-oriented research, such
as valuation, is definitely a step in the right direction’’ for accounting
researchers. I concur. However, such research has to move beyond reporting
descriptive statistics and evidence of the success of trading strategies into
proposing theories and presenting empirical tests of the hypotheses derived
from the theories.
Students of fundamental analysis and valuation research should have an
understanding of alternative valuation models and fundamental analysis
techniques both from the perspective of fulfilling the demand for valuation in
an efficient market and intrinsic valuation analysis designed to identify
mispriced securities. Below I summarize valuation models and empirical
research evaluating the models. I follow this up with fundamental analysis
research like Ou and Penman (1989a, b), Lev and Thiagarajan (1993), and
Abarbanell and Bushee (1997,1998). Whether abnormal returns can be earned
using intrinsic value calculation or fundamental analysis is deferred to the next
section on tests of market efficiency.

4.3.3. Valuation models


For fundamental analysis and valuation, the accounting literature relies on
the dividend-discounting model or its transformation, like the earnings
(capitalization) model or the residual income model. An ad hoc balance sheet
model is also popular in the literature (e.g., Barth and Landsman, 1995; Barth,
1991, 1994; Barth et al., 1992). It implicitly relies on the assumption that a firm
is merely a collection of separable assets whose reported amounts are assumed
to be noisy estimates of their market values. The balance sheet model is used
primarily to test value relevance in the context of evaluating financial reporting
standards, which is not the primary focus of my review (see Holthausen and
Watts, 2001). Moreover, when used, the balance sheet model is typically
augmented to also include earnings as an additional variable, which makes it
empirically similar to the transformed dividend-discounting models. I therefore
174 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

only discuss the dividend-discounting model and its accounting-variable-based


transformations.

4.3.3.1. Dividend-discounting and earnings capitalization models. This model is


generally attributed to Williams (1938). The dividend-discounting model
defines share price as the present value of expected future dividends discounted
at their risk-adjusted expected rate of return. Formally,
X
N Y
k
Pt ¼ Et ½Dtþk = ð1 þ rtþj Þ; ð18Þ
k¼1 j¼1
P
where Pt is the share price at time t; is the summation operator,
Q Et ½Dtþk  is
the market’s expectation of dividends in period t þ k; is the product
operator, and rtþj is the risk-adjusted discount rate that reflects the systematic
risk of dividends in period t þ j:
As seen from Eq. (18), price depends on the forecasts of future dividends and
the discount rates for future periods. Gordon (1962) makes simplifying
assumptions about both the dividend process and discount rates to derive a
simple valuation formula, known as the Gordon Growth model. Specifically, if
the discount rate, r; is constant through time and dividends are expected to
grow at a constant rate gor; then
Pt ¼ Et ðDtþ1 Þ=ðr2gÞ: ð19Þ
Since future dividends can be rewritten in terms of forecasted values of
future earnings and future investments, the dividend-discounting model can be
reformulated. Fama and Miller (1972, Chapter 2) is an excellent reference for
making the basic transition from the dividend-discounting model to an
earnings capitalization model.61 Fama and Miller make several points that are
helpful in understanding the drivers of share price. First, value depends on the
forecasted profitability of current and forecasted future investments, which
means dividend policy per se does not affect firm value, only a firm’s
investment policy affects value (Miller and Modigliani, 1961). Fama and Miller
(1972) entertain dividend signaling to the extent that a change in dividends
conveys information about the firm’s investment policy and in this sense
mitigates information asymmetry.62
Second, the growth rate, g; in Eq. (19) depends on the extent of reinvestment
of earnings into the firm and the rate of return on the investments. However,
reinvestment itself does not increase market value today unless the return on
61
For a more sophisticated treatment that allows for a changing discount rate, see Campbell and
Shiller (1988a, b), Fama (1977, 1996), and Rubinstein (1976).
62
See Ross (1977), Bhattacharya (1979), Asquith and Mullins (1983), Easterbrook (1984), Miller
and Rock (1985), Jensen (1986), and Healy and Palepu (1988), for some of the literature on
dividend signaling.
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 175

investments in the future exceeds the discount rate or the cost of capital, r: That
is, if the expected return on investments in all future periods exactly equals r;
then share price is simply Xtþ1 =r; where Xtþ1 is forecasted earnings for the next
period. This valuation is obtained regardless of the degree of expansion either
through reinvestment or through issuance of new equity. Fama and Miller
(1972, p. 90) refer to this valuation as ‘‘the capitalized value of the earnings
stream produced by the assets that the firm currently holds’’. Share value will
be higher than Xtþ1 =r only if the firm has opportunities to invest in projects
that are expected to earn an above-normal rate of return (i.e., return in excess
of r).
Third, capitalization of forecasted earnings generally yields incorrect
valuation because future earnings also reflect growth due to reinvestment
(i.e., plow back of earnings) and investments financed by new issuance of
equity. So, the transformation from a dividend-discounting model to an
earnings capitalization model requires an adjustment to exclude the effect of
reinvestment on future earnings, but include any effect on future earnings as a
result of earning an above-normal rate of return (i.e., the effect of growth
opportunities on earnings).
Earnings capitalization models are popular in accounting and much of the
earnings response coefficient literature relies on them (see Beaver, 1998; Beaver
et al., 1980). In earnings response coefficient applications of earnings
capitalization models, forecasted earnings are either based on time-series
properties of earnings (e.g., Beaver et al., 1980; Kormendi and Lipe, 1987;
Collins and Kothari, 1989) or analysts’ forecasts (e.g., Dechow et al., 1999).
This literature finesses the reinvestment effect on earnings by assuming that
future investments do not earn above-normal rates of returns, which is
equivalent to assuming a 100% dividend–payout ratio (e.g., Kothari and
Zimmerman, 1995). The marginal effect of growth opportunities is accounted
for in the earnings response coefficient literature by using proxies like the
market-to-book ratio, or through analysts’ high forecasted earnings growth.
The hypothesis is that such growth opportunities will have a positive marginal
effect on earnings response coefficients (e.g., Collins and Kothari, 1989)
because growth stocks’ prices are greater than Xtþ1 =r; the no-growth valuation
of a stock.

4.3.3.2. Residual income valuation models. The Ohlson (1995) and Feltham
and Ohlson (1995) residual income valuation models have become hugely
popular in the literature.63 Starting with a dividend-discounting model, the
residual income valuation model expresses value as the sum of current book

63
Several critiques of the Ohlson and Feltham–Ohlson models appear in the literature. These
include Bernard (1995), Lundholm (1995), Lee (1999), Lo and Lys (2001), Sunder (2000), and
Verrecchia (1998).
176 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

value and the discounted present value of expected abnormal earnings, defined
as forecasted earnings minus a capital charge equal to the forecasted book
value times the discount rate. Ohlson (1995) and others (e.g., Bernard, 1995;
Biddle et al., 1997) point out that the concept of residual income valuation has
been around for a long time.64 However, Ohlson (1995) and Feltham and
Ohlson (1995) deserve credit for successfully reviving the residual income
valuation idea, for developing the ideas more rigorously, and for impacting the
empirical literature.
The Ohlson (1995) model imposes a time-series structure on the abnormal
earnings process that affects value. The linear information dynamics in the
model (i) specifies an autoregressive, time-series decay in the current period’s
abnormal earnings, and (ii) models ‘‘information other than abnormal
earnings’’ into prices (Ohlson, 1995, p. 668). The economic intuition for the
autoregressive process in abnormal earnings is that competition will sooner or
later erode above-normal returns (i.e., positive abnormal earnings) or firms
experiencing below-normal rates of returns eventually exit. The other
information in the Ohlson model formalizes the idea that prices reflect a
richer information set than the transaction-based, historical-cost earnings (see
Beaver et al., 1980).
The Feltham and Ohlson (1995) model retains much of the structure of the
Ohlson (1995) model except the autoregressive time-series process. The
Feltham–Ohlson residual income valuation model expresses firm value in
terms of current and forecasted accounting numbers, much like the dividend-
discounting model does in terms of forecasted dividends or net cash flows.
Forecasted abnormal earnings can follow any process and they reflect the
availability of other information. This feature enables the use of analysts’
forecasts in empirical applications of the Feltham–Ohlson model and is
sometimes claimed to be an attractive feature of the valuation model vis-"a-vis
the dividend-discounting model. For example, in comparing the applications of
the dividend-discounting model to the residual income valuation model, Lee
et al. (1999) conclude that ‘‘practical considerations, like the availability of
analysts’ forecasts, makes this model easier to implement’’ than the dividend-
discount model (also see Bernard, 1995, pp. 742–743). The illusion of ease
arises because, assuming clean surplus, one can value the firm directly using
abnormal earnings forecasts, rather than backing out net cash flows from
pro forma financial statements. Abnormal earnings forecasts are the
difference between (analysts’) forecasts of earnings and a capital charge,

64
The predecessor papers of the residual valuation concept include Hamilton (1777), Marshall
(1890), Preinreich (1938), Edwards and Bell (1961), Peasnell (1982), and Stewart (1991).
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 177

i.e., Et ½Xtþk 2r BVtþk1 : Using abnormal earnings forecasts, the share price at
time t; Pt ; is expressed as65
X
N
Pt ¼ BVt þ Et ½Xtþk  r BVtþk1 =ð1 þ rÞk ; ð20Þ
k¼1

where BVt is the book value of equity at time t; Et ½: the expectation operator
where the expectation is based on information available at time t; Xt the
earnings for period t; and r the risk-adjusted discount rate applicable to the
equity earnings (or cash flows).
While Eq. (20) expresses price in terms of forecasted book values and
abnormal earnings, those forecasts have precisely the same information as
forecasts of dividends, which are implicit in analysts’ forecasts of earnings.
Stated differently, the residual income valuation model is a transformation of
the dividend-discounting model (see Frankel and Lee, 1998; Dechow et al.,
1999; Lee et al., 1999).
In addition to the apparent ease of implementation, Bernard (1995) and
others argue that another appealing property of the residual income valuation
model is that the choice of accounting method does not affect the model’s
implementation. If a firm employs aggressive accounting, its current book
value and earnings would be high, but its forecasted earnings will be lower and
the capital charge (or normal earnings) would be higher. Therefore, lower
forecasted future abnormal earnings offset the consequences of aggressive
accounting that appear in current earnings. Unfortunately, the elegant
property that the effect of the management’s choice of accounting methods
on earnings in one period is offset by changes in forecasted earnings has three
unappealing consequences. First, it renders the Feltham–Ohlson model devoid
of any accounting content, just as a dividend-discounting model is not
particularly helpful for financial reporting purposes. The accounting content is
lost because the model does not offer any guidance or predictions about firms’
choice of accounting methods or properties of accounting standards,
notwithstanding the frequent use of the term conservative and unbiased
accounting in the context of the residual income model. This point is discussed
in detail in Lo and Lys (2001), Sunder (2000), Verrecchia (1998), and
Holthausen and Watts (2001).
Second, from a practical standpoint of an analyst, even though reduced
future abnormal earnings offset the effect of aggressive accounting methods, an
analyst must forecast future abnormal earnings by unbundling current earnings
into an aggressive-accounting-method-induced component and remaining
regular earnings.
65
The pricing equation is misspecified in the presence of complex, but routinely encountered,
capital structures that include preferred stock, warrants, executive stock options etc. I ignore such
misspecification in the discussion below.
178 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

Third, the interpretation of abnormal earnings is clouded. Some researchers


interpret expected abnormal earnings as estimates of economic rents (Claus
and Thomas, 1999a, b; Gebhardt et al., 1999). However, the choice of
accounting methods mechanically affects the estimates of expected abnormal
earnings, so those estimates by themselves are not an indication of economic
rents. For example, a firm choosing the pooling of interest method of
accounting for a merger will have higher expected ‘‘abnormal’’ earnings
compared to an otherwise identical firm that uses the purchase method of
accounting for mergers. In contrast, America Online is expected to report an
amortization charge of approximately $2 billion per year for next 25 years as a
result of its merger with Time Warner, which will be accounted for as a
purchase transaction.

4.3.3.3. Empirical applications and evaluation of valuation models. All


valuation models make unrealistic assumptions. This feature is common to
most theoretical models, like the Ohlson (1995) model that imposes a
particular structure on the abnormal earnings process and other information.
It is fruitless to criticize one or more of these models on the basis of the
realism of the assumptions.66 Assuming efficient capital markets, one
objective of a valuation model is to explain observed share prices.
Alternatively, in an inefficient capital market, a good model of intrinsic
or fundamental value should predictably generate positive or negative
abnormal returns. Therefore, in the spirit of positive science, it is worth-
while examining which of these models best explains share prices and/or
which has the most predictive power with respect to future returns.
In this section, I evaluate models using the former criteria, whereas
the next section focuses on the models’ ability to identify mispriced
securities.
Several recent studies compare the valuation models’ ability to explain
cross-sectional or temporal variation in security prices (see Dechow et al., 1999;
Francis et al., 1997, 1998; Hand and Landsman, 1998; Penman, 1998; Penman
and Sougiannis, 1997, 1998; Myers, 1999).67 Two main conclusions emerge
from these studies. First, even though the residual income valuation model
is identical to the dividend-discounting model, empirical implementations
of the dividend-discounting model yield value estimates do a much poorer job
66
Lo and Lys (2001), in the spirit of Roll’s (1977) critique of the CAPM, argue that the Feltham
and Ohlson (1995) and Ohlson (1995) models are not testable. Any test of the models is a joint test
of the model (or the model’s assumptions) and that the model is descriptive of the market’s pricing
of stocks.
67
In an influential study, Kaplan and Ruback (1995) evaluate discounted cash flow and multiples
approaches to valuation. Since they do not examine earnings-based valuation models, I do not
discuss their study.
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 179

of explaining cross-sectional variation in market values than earnings


capitalization models (e.g., Francis et al., 1997; Penman and Sougiannis,
1998). Second, the traditional implementation of the dividend-discounting
model by capitalizing analysts’ forecasts of earnings is just about as successful
as the residual income valuation model (e.g., Dechow et al., 1999; Lee et al.,
1999; Liu et al., 2000). I discuss and explain the two conclusions below.
The poor showing of the dividend-discounting model, the first conclusion
stated above, appears to be a consequence of inconsistent application of the
model in current research (see Lundholm and O’Keefe (2000) for an in-depth
discussion). Consider the implementation of the model in Penman and
Sougiannis (1998) and Francis et al. (1997) with a five-year horizon for
dividend forecasts plus terminal value. The dividend forecasts for the five years
generally account for a small fraction of current market value. This is not
surprising because dividend yield is only a few percent. The terminal value is
estimated assuming a steady-state growth in dividends beyond year five. It is
common to assume the steady-state growth rate, g; to be either zero or about
4%. Both Penman and Sougiannis (1998) and Francis et al. (1997) report
results using g ¼ 0 or 4% in perpetuity.
The inconsistent application of the dividend-discount model arises because if
g ¼ 0; then the forecasted dividend in period 6 should be the earnings for
period 6. FDtþ6 should equal forecasted earnings for year 6 because once the
no-growth assumption is invoked, the need for investments diminishes
compared to that in the earlier growth periods. That is, there is no longer a
need to plow earnings back into the firm to fund investments for growth.
Investments roughly equal to depreciation would be sufficient to maintain zero
growth in steady state. Therefore, cash available for distribution to
equityholders will approximate earnings, i.e., the payout ratio will be 100%.
Thus, assuming a zero growth in perpetuity will typically result in a huge
permanent increase in dividends from year 5 to year 6, with dividends equal to
earnings in years 6 and beyond. Instead, both Penman and Sougiannis (1998)
and Francis et al. (1997) use FDtþ5 ð1 þ gÞ; where FDtþ5 is the forecasted
dividend for year 5. Naturally, they find that dividend capitalization models
perform poorly.68 However, if the implications of the zero-growth assumption
are applied consistently to the dividend discounting and the residual income
valuation models, the fundamental value estimate from both models will be
identical.69 Similar logic applies to other growth rate assumptions.
Francis et al. (1997, Tables 3 and 4) do report results using the
dividends=earnings assumption to calculate the terminal value, but their

68
Additional misspecification is possible because earnings are eventually paid to both common
and preferred stockholders, but the abnormal earnings valuation model is implemented without full
consideration to preferred shareholders.
69
See Lundholm and O’Keefe (2000) and Courteau et al. (2000) for further details on this point.
180 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

approach is confounded by the fact that they use Value Line’s five-year-ahead
forecast of the price–earnings multiple. Ironically, either because of the implicit
assumption of dividends=earnings or because Value Line is skilled in
forecasting the future price–earnings multiple, the value estimates in Francis
et al. that implicitly use the dividends=earnings assumption for terminal value,
are more accurate than all other models. The former explanation is more likely
because otherwise a trading strategy based on the Value Line forecasts would
yield huge abnormal returns.
The second conclusion from the empirical literature on valuation models is
that simple earnings capitalization models with ad hoc and/or restrictive
assumptions do as well as the more rigorous residual income valuation models
in explaining cross-sectional variation in prices. The economic intuition
underlying the residual income valuation model is appealing. In the spirit of the
model, empirical applications generally assume that above-normal rates of
returns on investments will decay and there is a careful attempt to account for
the wealth effects of growth through reinvestment. Still, Dechow et al. (1999)
find a simple model that capitalizes analyst’s next period earnings forecast in
perpetuity (i.e., a random walk in forecasted earnings and 100% dividend
payout, both ad hoc assumptions) does better than the residual income
valuation model.70,71 What explains this puzzle?
To understand the lack of improved explanatory power of the more
sophisticated valuation models, consider the variance of the independent
variable, forecasted earnings. Forecasted earnings have two components:
normal earnings (=the capital charge) and expected abnormal earnings. Since
the present value of normal earnings is the book value, which is included as an
independent variable, the normal earnings component of forecasted earnings
serves as an error in the independent variable that uses forecasted earnings to
explain prices. However, for annual earnings data, most of the variance of
forecasted earnings is due to expected abnormal earnings. Use of a constant
discount rate across the sample firms further reduces the variance accounted
for by normal earnings in the residual income valuation model applications
(Beaver, 1999).72 Therefore, in spite of the fact that forecasted earnings are
contaminated by normal earnings, which contributes to misestimated

70
The improved explanatory power of fundamental values estimated using analysts’ forecasts vis-
a" -vis historical earnings information highlights the important role of other information that
influences expectations of future earnings beyond the information in past earnings (e.g., Beaver
et al., 1980).
71
Kim and Ritter (1999) find that IPOs are best valued using forecasted one-year-ahead earnings
per share and Liu et al. (2000) present similar evidence comparing multiples of forecasted earnings
against more sophisticated valuation models.
72
However, substituting a firm-specific discount rate is unlikely to make a big difference. Use of
firm-specific discount rate is not without a cost: discount rates are notoriously difficult to estimate
and existing techniques estimate the rates with a large standard error (see Fama and French, 1997).
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 181

persistence in the context of valuation, the resulting errors-in-variables


problem is not particularly serious. The variance of the measurement error is
small relative to the signal variance, i.e., the variance of forecasted earnings
minus normal earnings. In addition, any error in estimating the cost of capital
employed to calculate normal earnings diminishes the benefit of adjusting
forecasted earnings for normal earnings.
While controlling for normal earnings is not helpful in the above context, as
an economic concept it rests on solid grounds. The preceding discussion is not
intended to discourage the use of discount rates or risk adjustment. It simply
highlights one context where the payoff to the use of risk adjustment is modest.
Over long horizons, risk adjustment is potentially more fruitful.
There are at least three other empirical attempts (Myers, 1999; Hand and
Landsman, 1998, 1999) to test Ohlson’s (1995) linear information dynamics
valuation model. All three studies as well as Dechow et al. (1999) find evidence
inconsistent with the linear information dynamics. I do not think one learns
much from rejecting the linear information dynamics of the Ohlson model.
Any one-size-fits-all description of the evolution of future cash flows or
earnings for a sample of firms is likely to be rejected. While an autoregressive
process in residual income as a parsimonious description is economically
intuitive, there is nothing in economic theory to suggest that all firms’ residual
earnings will follow an autoregressive process at all stages in their life cycle. A
more fruitful empirical avenue would be to understand the determinants of the
autoregressive process or deviations from that process as a function of firm,
industry, macroeconomic, or international institutional characteristics. The
conditional estimation attempts in Fama and French (2000) and Dechow et al.
(1999) to parameterize the autoregressive coefficient (discussed in Section 4.1.2)
are an excellent start.

4.3.3.4. Residual income valuation models and discount rate estimation. An


emerging body of research uses the dividend-discounting model and the
Feltham–Ohlson residual income valuation model to estimate discount rates.
This research includes papers by Botosan (1997), Claus and Thomas (1999a, b),
and Gebhardt et al. (1999). The motivation for this research is twofold.
First, there is considerable debate and disagreement among academics and
practitioners with respect to the magnitude of the market risk premium (see
Mehra and Prescott, 1985; Blanchard, 1993; Siegel and Thaler, 1997;
Cochrane, 1997) and whether and by how much it changes through time with
changing riskiness of the economy (Fama and Schwert, 1977; Keim and
Stambaugh, 1986; Fama and French, 1988; Campbell and Shiller, 1988a;
Kothari and Shanken, 1997; Pontiff and Schall, 1998). The market risk
premium is the difference between the expected return on the market portfolio
of stocks and the risk-free rate of return. The historical average realized risk
premium has been about 8% per year (Ibbotson Associates, 1999).
182 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

Second, the cost of equity capital of an individual firm is a function of both


the market risk premium and its relative risk (e.g., beta of the equity in the
context of the CAPM). In spite of a vast body of research in finance and
economics, the dust has still not settled on the set of priced risk factors. In
addition, estimates of a security’s sensitivity to priced factors, i.e., estimates of
relative risks, are notoriously noisy. Therefore, the state-of-the-art estimate of
cost of equity (relative risk times the risk premium plus the risk-free rate) is
extremely imprecise (see Fama and French, 1997; Elton, 1999).
Research that uses the Feltham–Ohlson model to estimate equity discount
rates attempts to improve upon the cost of equity estimates obtained using the
traditional methods in finance. The empirical approach to estimating the cost
of equity using the Feltham–Ohlson model is quite straightforward. It seeks to
exploit information in analysts’ forecasts and current prices, rather than that in
the historical time series of security prices, to estimate discount rates. Gebhardt
et al. (1999) note that practitioners have long attempted to infer discount rates
from analysts’ forecasts (e.g., Damodaran, 1994; Ibbotson, 1996; Gordon and
Gordon, 1997; Madden, 1998; Pratt, 1998), but that the same approach is not
popular among academics.
In an efficient market, price is the discounted present value of the sum of the
book value and the discounted present value of the forecasted residual income
stream. Analysts’ forecasts of earnings and dividend–payout ratios are used to
forecast the residual income stream. The cost of equity then is defined as the
discount rate that equates the price to the fundamental value, i.e., the sum of
book value and the discounted residual income stream. An analogous
approach can be employed to infer discount rates using forecasts of future
dividends.
Since the information used in the residual income valuation model is
identical to that needed for the dividend-discount model, discount rates backed
out of a dividend-discount model should be exactly the same as those from the
residual income valuation model. However, studies using earnings-based
valuation models to back out market risk premiums or equity discount rates
claim that earnings-based valuation models yield better estimates of discount
rates than using the dividend-discount model. For example, Claus and Thomas
(1999a, b, p. 5) state: ‘‘Although it is isomorphic to the dividend present value
model, the abnormal earnings approach uses other information that is
currently available to reduce the importance of assumed growth rates, and is
able to narrow considerably the range of allowable growth rates by focusing on
growth in rents (abnormal earnings), rather than dividends.’’
The striking conclusion from the Claus and Thomas (1999a, b) and
Gebhardt et al. (1999) studies is that their estimate of the risk premium is
only about 2–3%, compared to historical risk premium estimated at about 8%
in the literature. In line with the small risk premium, the studies also find that
cross-sectional variation in the expected rates of return on equity that would
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 183

capture differences in firms’ relative risks is also quite small. However,


Gebhardt et al. (1999) show that the variation in their estimates of costs of
equity is correlated with many of the traditional measures of risk. This
increases our confidence in the estimated discount rates.
The attempts to estimate the market risk premium and costs of equity
address an important question. The intuition for why the estimated discount
rates are less dispersed is that rational forecasts are less variable than actual
data.73 Therefore, estimates of discount rates using forecast data are also
expected to be less volatile than those obtained using ex post data. While it is
appealing to use forecast data to estimate discount rates, there is also a
downside, and hence, I think it is premature to conclude that the risk premium
is as low as 2–3% for at least two reasons.
First, it is possible that forecasted growth, especially the terminal perpetuity
growth rate, used in the abnormal earnings valuation model is too low. The
lower the forecasted growth, mechanically the lower the discount rate must be
in order for the price-equal-to-the-fundamental-value identity to hold.
Second, the earnings-based fundamental valuation approach used to
estimate discount rates assumes market efficiency. However, the same
approach is also employed to conclude that returns are predictable and that
the market is currently overvalued (e.g., Lee et al. (1999), and many other
academics and practitioners). That is, assuming forecasts are rational and
accurate estimates of discount rates are used, Lee et al. and others conclude
that equities are predictably mispriced. Ironically, another body of research
uses the residual income valuation model to conclude that analysts’ forecasts
are biased, and that the market is naively fixated on analysts’ forecasts, and
therefore returns are predictable (e.g., Dechow et al., 1999, 2000).
In summary, of the three variables in the valuation modelFprice, forecasts,
and discount ratesFtwo must be assumed correct to solve for the third. Using
different combinations of two variables at a time, research has drawn
inferences about the third variable. Because the assumptions in the three sets
of research are incompatible, the conclusions are weak. Research on stock
mispricing relative to fundamental valuation, properties of analysts’ forecasts,
and market’s na.ıve reliance on analysts’ forecasts provides evidence on
potential settings where the model fails or the market’s pricing is inconsistent
with that based on the valuation model. That is, the evidence is inconsistent
with the joint hypothesis of the model and market efficiency. These are tests of
market efficiency that I review in the next section. A fruitful avenue for future
research would be to provide further evidence on the relation between
estimated discount rates and subsequent returns (see Gebhardt et al., 1999).

73
See Shiller (1981) for using this argument in the context of testing the rationality of the stock
market. Shiller’s work led to a huge literature in finance and economics on examining whether stock
markets are excessively volatile.
184 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

4.3.4. Fundamental analysis using financial ratios


This stream of research has two objectives. First, it uses information in
financial ratios to forecast future earnings more accurately than using other
methods (e.g., time-series forecasts and/or analysts’ forecasts). Second, it
identifies mispriced securities. The underlying premise is that the financial-
ratio-based model predicts future earnings better than the alternatives and this
superior predictive power is not reflected in current share prices (i.e., market
are inefficient).

4.3.4.1. Earnings prediction. There is a long-standing interest in earnings


prediction in the accounting literature (see Section 4.1.2). Below I focus on
forecasts of future earnings and accounting rates of returns using financial
ratios. There is a long history of practitioners and academics interpreting
univariate ratios like the price–earnings multiple and price-to-book ratio as
leading indicators of earnings growth (see, for example, Preinreich, 1938;
Molodovsky, 1953; Beaver and Morse, 1978; Cragg and Malkiel, 1982;
Peasnell, 1982; Penman, 1996, 1998; Ryan, 1995; Beaver and Ryan, 2000;
Fama and French, 2000). The economic logic for the predictive power of price–
earnings and price-to-book ratios with respect to future earnings is
straightforward. Price is the capitalized present value of a firm’s expected
future earnings from current as well as future expected investments, whereas
current earnings only measure the profitability of realized revenues from
current and past investments. Price thus has information about the firm’s
future profitability, which contributes to the predictive ability of price–earnings
and price-to-book ratios with respect to future earnings growth. In addition to
the predictive ability stemming from the forward-looking information in prices
about future earnings, the ratio-based earnings prediction literature also
examines the role of transitory earnings and accounting methods in forecasting
earnings.
Ou and Penman (1989a, b) initiated rigorous academic research on
earnings prediction based on a multivariate analysis of financial ratios. The
main idea is to examine whether combining information in individual
ratios about future earnings growth can yield more accurate forecasts of
future earnings. Ou and Penman use statistical procedures to reduce a
large number of financial ratios to a subset that is most effective in forecasting
future earnings. In holdout samples, they show that the forecasting model
using the subset of the ratios outperforms time-series models of annual
earnings in terms of forecast accuracy and contemporaneous association with
stock returns.
Several extensions of Ou and Penman’s earnings prediction research appear
in the literature. For example, the innovation in Lev and Thiagarajan (1993)
and Abarbanell and Bushee (1997, 1998) is that, unlike Ou and Penman
(1989a, b), they use ‘‘a priori conceptual arguments to study any of their’’ ratios
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 185

(Abarbanell and Bushee, 1998, p. 22). They demonstrate that the earnings
prediction signals in variables like growth in accounts receivables relative to
sales growth and gross margin rate are incrementally associated with
contemporaneous stock returns and are significantly helpful in predicting
future earnings.
Other ratio-based earnings prediction approaches typically seek to exploit
the information in prices about future earnings. For example, Penman (1996,
1998) develops techniques that combine the information in price–earnings
ratios and price-to-book ratios that is superior to using any one ratio to
forecast future earnings or the return on equity. Presence of transitory earnings
contaminates price–earnings ratio as an indicator of growth. This weakness in
price–earnings ratios is in part remedied by also using the price-to-book ratio,
which signals growth in book equity and future returns on equity and because
it is relatively unaffected by current transitory earnings. Penman (1998)
presents empirical evidence on the benefits of combining the information in
price–earnings and price-to-book ratios for earnings prediction. Specifically,
using historical data, Penman (1998) estimates optimal weights on price–
earnings and price-to-book ratios to forecast one- and three-year-ahead
earnings. The evidence suggests moderate forecasting gains from optimal
weighting of information in the two ratios.
Another example of ratio-based earnings prediction research is Beaver and
Ryan (2000). They decompose ‘‘bias’’ and ‘‘lag’’ components of the price-to-
book ratios to forecast future book returns on equity. Bias in the book-to-
market ratio arises when a firm uses conservative accounting such that its book
value of equity is expected to be persistently below the share price. Beaver and
Ryan define lag as the time it takes for book values to catch up with stock
prices in reflecting a given economic gain or loss. Consistent with economic
intuition, Beaver and Ryan (2000) predict an inverse relation between bias and
future return on equity, i.e., high book-to-market ratio forecasts low earnings
growth. The horizon over which bias is helpful in predicting the return on
equity depends on lag or the speed with which book values adjust to reflect an
economic gains and losses. If the lag is short-lived, then the prediction horizon
is also short. Evidence in Beaver and Ryan is broadly consistent with their
predictions.
A final example of ratio-based earnings prediction research is Penman and
Zhang (2000). They study the interaction of changes in growth and
conservative accounting practices like expensing of research and development
and marketing costs. The interaction is helpful in forecasting future earnings
because extreme changes in growth are mean reverting and the effect is
noticeable in the case of firms that are intensive in research and development
and marketing or LIFO inventory reserves, etc. They predict and find that
firms exhibiting extreme changes in research and development and marketing
expenditures and LIFO reserves exhibit a rebound in their return on net assets.
186 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

Penman and Zhang label this phenomenon as the predictive ability of earnings
quality.

4.3.4.2. Summary. The ratio-based earnings prediction literature focuses on


the forecasting power of financial ratios with respect to future earnings.
Empirical evidence is generally consistent with the ratios’ ability to predict
earnings growth. These models, however, rarely outperform analysts’ forecasts
of earnings, especially forecasts over long horizons. The primary interest in the
ratio-based forecasting models is the lure of above-normal investment returns
from simple, cheaply implementable models.

4.3.4.3. Return prediction. A large number of the ratio-based earnings


prediction studies also examine whether trading strategies that exploit
information about earnings growth earn above-normal rates of return. For
example, Ou and Penman (1989a, b), Lev and Thiagarajan (1993), Abarbanell
and Bushee (1998), Piotroski (2000), and Penman and Zhang (2000)
demonstrate that the information in the earnings prediction signals is helpful
in generating abnormal stock returns (see the next section), which suggests
market inefficiency with respect to financial statement information.

4.4. Tests of market efficiency: overview

In this section, I discuss the empirical literature in accounting on tests of


market efficiency. The review is deliberately narrowly focused on empirical
issues. I do not examine market efficiency topics like the definition of market
efficiency and tests of mean reversion in aggregate stock returns. These topics
are important and essential for understanding the market efficiency research in
accounting, but are beyond the scope of my review. Fortunately, several
excellent surveys of the market efficiency literature exist. I encourage interested
researchers to read Ball (1978, 1992, 1994), Fama (1970, 1991, 1998), LeRoy
(1989), MacKinlay (1997), and Campbell et al. (1997).
Market efficiency tests in the financial accounting literature fall into two
categories: event studies and cross-sectional tests of return predictability (see
Fama, 1991). Event studies examine security price performance either over a
short window of few minutes to a few days (short-window tests) or over a long
horizon of one-to-five years (long-horizon tests). Section 4.4.1 discusses the
attractive features as well as research design and data problems in drawing
inferences about market efficiency based on short- and long-window event
studies. Section 4.4.2 surveys the empirical literature on event studies. I review
event studies from the post-earnings-announcement drift literature in Section
4.4.2.1, studies of market efficiency with respect to accounting methods
and method changes and functional fixation in Section 4.4.2.2, and studies on
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 187

long-horizon returns to accrual management and analyst forecast optimism in


Section 4.4.2.3.
Cross-sectional tests of return predictability (or anomalies studies) examine
whether the cross section of returns on portfolios formed periodically using a
specific trading rule are consistent with a model of expected returns like the
CAPM. These are tests of the joint hypothesis of market efficiency and the
equilibrium expected rate of return model employed by the researcher. Section
4.4.3 reviews the literature on cross-sectional tests of return predictability.
Section 4.4.3.1 summarizes results of tests of the market’s (mis)pricing of
earnings yields and accounting accruals and Section 4.4.3.2 discusses findings
from tests of long-horizon returns to fundamental analysis.

4.4.1. Issues in drawing inferences from event studies


Event studies are tests of market efficiency. They test the impact, speed, and
unbiasedness of the market’s reaction to an event. In an efficient capital
market, a security’s price reaction to an event is expected to be immediate and
subsequent price movement is expected to be unrelated to the event-period
reaction or its prior period return. The modern literature on event studies
originates with Fama et al. (1969) and Ball and Brown (1968), who examine
security return behavior surrounding stock splits and earnings announce-
ments.74 Since then hundreds of event studies have been conducted in the legal,
financial economics, and accounting literatures. There are two types of event
studies: short-window event studies and long-horizon post-event performance
studies. The inferential issues for the short-window event studies are
straightforward, but they are quite complicated for the long-horizon
performance studies. I discuss the salient issues of each type of study below.

4.4.1.1. Short-window event studies. Short-window event studies provide


relatively clean tests of market efficiency, in particular when sample firms
experience an event that is not clustered in calendar time (e.g., earnings
announcement day returns or merger announcement day returns). The
evidence from short-window event studies is generally consistent with market
efficiency. The evidence using intra-day, daily, and weekly returns to wide-
ranging events like earnings announcements, accounting irregularities,
mergers, and dividends suggests the market reacts quickly to information
releases. In some cases, the reaction appears incomplete and there is a drift,
which contradicts market efficiency.
In a short-window test, researchers face few problems of misestimating the
expected return over the short event window (e.g., Brown and Warner, 1985).
Expected market return per day is about 0.05%, so the misestimation in a
74
The first published event study is Dolley (1933). Like Fama et al. (1969), it examines the event-
period price effects of stock splits.
188 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

security’s return due to risk mismeasurement (e.g., Scholes and Williams, 1977;
Dimson, 1979) in most cases is likely to be less than 0.01–0.02% per day.75 This
is small relative to an average abnormal return of 0.5% or more that is
commonly reported in event studies.76
One concern in assessing the significance of the average market reaction in
the event period is that the event might induce an increase in return variability
(e.g., Beaver (1968) reports increased return variability around earnings
announcements). Tests that fail to account for the increased return variability
excessively reject the null hypothesis of zero average abnormal return (e.g.,
Christie, 1991; Collins and Dent, 1984). Use of the cross-sectional standard
deviation of event period abnormal returns greatly mitigates the potential
problem arising from an event-induced increase in return variability.

4.4.1.2. Long-horizon event studies. A long-horizon event study tests whether


one-to-five-year returns following an event are systematically non-zero for a
sample of firms. These studies assume that the market can overreact or
underreact to new information and that it can take a long time to correct the
misvaluation because of continued apparently irrational behavior and frictions
in the market. The source of underreaction and overreaction is human
judgment or behavioral biases in information processing. There is a systematic
component to the behavioral biases so that in the aggregate the pricing
implications of the biases do not cancel out, but manifest themselves in security
prices deviating systematically from those implied by the underlying funda-
mentals. Several recent studies model the price implications of human
behavioral biases to explain apparent long-horizon market inefficiency (e.g.,
Barberis et al., 1998; Daniel et al., 1998; Hong and Stein, 1999; DeBondt and
Thaler, 1995; Shleifer and Vishny, 1997).
Recent evidence in the finance and accounting literature suggests huge
apparent abnormal returns spread over several years following well-publicized
events like initial public offerings, seasoned equity issues, and analysts’ long-
term forecasts. Collectively this research poses a formidable challenge to the
efficient markets hypothesis. However, before we conclude that markets are
grossly inefficient, it is important to recognize that long-horizon event studies
suffer from at least three problems: risk misestimation, data problems, and the
lack of a theory of market inefficiency as the null hypothesis. For an in-depth
75
An implicit assumption is that the event does not cause the sample securities’ beta risks to
increase by an order of magnitude. See Ball and Kothari (1991) for stocks’ daily beta risk in event
time over 21 days centered around earnings announcements and Brennan and Copeland (1988) for
evidence on risk changes around stock split announcements.
76
The real danger of failing to reject the null hypothesis of no effect when it is false (i.e., a type II
error) in a short-window event study stems from uncertainty about the event day (see Brown and
Warner, 1985).
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 189

discussion of conceptual and empirical problems in drawing inferences from


long-horizon tests of market efficiency, see Barber and Lyon (1997), Kothari
and Warner (1997), Fama (1998), Lyon et al. (1999), and Loughran and Ritter
(2000).
4.4.1.2.1. Risk measurement and risk factors. Misestimation of risk can
produce economically and statistically significant magnitudes of apparent
abnormal returns because the post-event return measurement period is long.
Risk misestimation can arise because sensitivity to a risk factor is measured
incorrectly or because a relevant risk factor is omitted from the model of
expected returns. Random errors in estimating stocks’ risks are not a serious
problem because almost all the studies examine performance at a portfolio
level.77 Risk misestimation is a problem, however, if the misestimation is
correlated across the stocks in a portfolio. This scenario is plausible because of
the endogenous nature of economic events, i.e., the subset of firms experiencing
an economic event is not random with respect to the population of firms.
Typically unusual performance precedes an event and risk changes are
associated with past performance (e.g., French et al., 1987; Chan, 1988; Ball
and Kothari, 1989; Ball et al., 1993, 1995).
With regards to potential bias in estimated abnormal performance because
of omitted risk factors, the finance literature has not quite settled on the risk
factors priced in stock valuations as well as the measurement of the risk
factors. Thus, for potential reasons of both risk mismeasurement and omitted
risk factors, misestimation of securities’ expected returns in a long-horizon
event study is a serious concern. Stated differently, discriminating between
market inefficiency and a bad model of expected returns is difficult in long-
horizon event studies.
4.4.1.2.2. Data problems. A variety of data problems afflict long-horizon
event studies and make it difficult to draw definitive inferences about market
efficiency. (i) Survivor and data-snooping biases can be serious in long-horizon
performance studies, especially when both stock-price and financial accounting
data are used in the tests, as is common in many long-horizon market efficiency
tests in accounting (see Lo and MacKinlay, 1990; Kothari et al., 1995, 1999b).
Since many studies analyze financial and return data for the surviving subset of
the sample firms, inferential problems arise due to potential survivor biases in
the data. It is not uncommon to observe 50% or more of the initial sample of
firms failing to survive the long horizon examined in the study.
(ii) Problems of statistical inferences arise in long-horizon performance
studies. Sample firms’ long-horizon returns tend to be cross-correlated even if
77
Random errors in risk estimation and thus in abnormal return estimation can be a serious
problem if the researcher correlates estimated abnormal returns with firm-specific variables like
financial data and proxies for trading frictions. The random error weakens the correlation and thus
the test’s power.
190 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

the event is not perfectly clustered in calendar time (Bernard, 1987; Brav,
2000). Long-horizon return data are highly right skewed, which poses
problems in using statistical tests that assume normality (see Barber and
Lyon, 1997; Kothari and Warner, 1997; Brav, 2000). Because of the statistical
properties of return data, the literature raises questions whether the
appropriate return measure is buy-and-hold returns or monthly returns
cumulated over a long period (see Roll, 1983; Blume and Stambaugh, 1983;
Conrad and Kaul, 1993; Fama, 1998; Mitchell and Stafford, 2000). Loughran
and Ritter (2000) discuss additional inference problems that arise because the
timing of events is endogenous. For example, we witness IPO waves either
because there are periods of good investment opportunities and/or because
issuers believe the market is overvalued. As a result, it is possible that
misvalued event firms contaminate the benchmark portfolios (e.g., market,
size, and book-to-market portfolios) and inferences from market efficiency
tests are flawed.
(iii) Skewness of financial variables (returns and or earnings) coupled
with non-randomness in data availability and survivor biases can produce
apparent abnormal performance and a spurious association between ex
ante information variables like analysts’ growth forecasts and ex post long-
horizon price performance (see Kothari et al., 1999b). As noted above, in
long-horizon studies, it is not uncommon to encounter data availability for
less than 50% of the initial sample either because post-event financial data
are unavailable or because firms do not survive the post-event long horizon. If
this decline in sample size is not random with respect to the original popula-
tion of firms experiencing an event, then inferences based on the
sample examined by a researcher can be erroneous. Kothari et al. (1999b)
present evidence to suggest both skewness in financial data and non-
random survival rates in samples drawn from CRSP, Compustat, and IBES
databases.
Long-horizon market inefficiency studies generally report larger magnitudes
of abnormal returns for subsets of firms. These subsets of firms often consist of
small market capitalization stocks, stocks that trade at low prices with
relatively large proportionate bid–ask spreads, stocks that are not traded
frequently (i.e., illiquid stocks), and stocks that are not closely followed by
analysts and other information intermediaries in the market (Bhushan, 1994).
The pronounced indication of market inefficiency among stocks with high
trading frictions and less information in the market is interpreted as prices
being set as if the market na.ıvely relies on biased analyst forecasts. While this is
possible, there is at least one alternative explanation. The data problems
discussed above are likely more prevalent in samples where we observe the
greatest degree of apparent inefficiency. Careful attention to data problems will
help discriminate between competing explanations for evidence that currently
is interpreted as market inefficiency.
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 191

4.4.1.3. A theory of market inefficiency and specification of the null hypothe-


sis. In addition to potential risk measurement and data problems
discussed above, there is another challenge in drawing definitive conclusions
about market efficiency. While much of the research concludes market
inefficiency, further progress will be made if researchers develop a theory
that predicts a particular return behavior and based on that theory design
tests that specify market inefficiency as the null hypothesis. Researchers
should then design powerful tests that fail to reject that null hypothesis. An
excellent example of such research is Bernard and Thomas (1990), who specify
stock-price behavior under a na.ıve earnings expectation model as well as
a sophisticated earnings expectation model. However, there is still a need for a
well-developed theory of na.ıve investor behavior that can be subjected to
empirical testing in other contexts or a theory that would be helpful
in explaining observed return behavior in contexts such as those discussed
below.
Currently the null of market efficiency is rejected regardless of whether
positive or negative abnormal return (i.e., under- or over-reaction) is observed.
A theory of market inefficiency should specify conditions under which market
under- and over-reaction is forecasted. For example, why does the market
overreact to accruals in annual earnings (as in Sloan, 1996), but underreact to
quarterly earnings information as seen from the post-earnings announcement
drift? What determines the timing of abnormal returns in the long-horizon
studies? For example, why does Frankel and Lee’s (1998, Table 8 and Fig. 2)
fundamental valuation strategy, which is designed to exploit mispricing,
produce relatively small abnormal returns in the first 18 months, but large
returns in the following 18 months? Sloan (1996, Table 6) finds that more than
half of the three-year hedge portfolio return (i.e., lowest minus the highest
accrual decile portfolio) return is earned in the first year and a little less than
one-sixth of the three-year return is earned in the third year of the investment
strategy.
Some have priors that the inefficiency would be corrected quickly, whereas
others argue it can take a long time. For example, W. Thomas (1999, p. 19) in
his analysis of the market’s ability to process information about the persistence
of the foreign component of earnings, states: ‘‘y I proceed under the
assumption that mispricing is more likely to cause only a short-term relation
with abnormal returns while unidentified risk is more likely to cause a short-
and long-term relation with abnormal returns.’’ If transaction costs,
institutional holdings, and other related characteristics are an impediment to
speedy absorption of information in stock prices, then long-horizon studies
should test whether there is a positive relation between the horizon over which
abnormal returns are earned and proxies for the information environment. If
large stocks earn abnormal returns for several years, I would interpret that as
damaging to the market inefficiency hypothesis.
192 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

Another important reason for the demand for a theory of market inefficiency
is to understand what might cause markets to be inefficient (i.e., why might
prices deviate systematically from economic fundamentals?). Several empirical
studies document that intrinsic values estimated using the residual income
model predict future returns (see Lee (1999), and discussion below for
summaries). However, the residual income model or the dividend-discount
model provides little guidance in terms of why we should expect to predict
future returns using estimated intrinsic values. Such a prediction requires a
theory for why and where prices would deviate systematically from intrinsic
values so the theory can be tested empirically.78 The theory would either use
investors’ behavioral biases or trading frictions to predict deviations of security
prices from their intrinsic values. Accounting researchers’ efforts on funda-
mental analysis and tests of market efficiency would be more fruitful if some
energy is channeled into the development and tests of theories of inefficiency.

4.4.1.4. Summary. Long-horizon performance studies and tests of market


efficiency are fraught with methodological problems. The problems in data
bases, potential danger of researchers engaging in data snooping, non-normal
statistical properties of data, and research design issues collectively weaken our
confidence in the conclusion that markets are grossly inefficient in processing
information in news events quickly and unbiasedly. I foresee considerable
research that attempts to overcome the problems faced in long-horizon tests so
that we can draw more definitive conclusions about market efficiency. Capital
markets researchers in accounting should exploit their knowledge of
institutional details and financial data and design more creative long-horizon
tests of market efficiency. However, the challenges in designing better tests also
underscore the need for a sophisticated training in cutting-edge research in
finance and econometrics.

4.4.2. Evidence from event studies


Short-window tests: Like the evidence in the financial economics literature,
most of the evidence from short-window event studies in the capital markets
literature in accounting is consistent with market efficiency. However, some
evidence suggests market inefficiency. This is discussed in the context of post-
earnings-announcement drift and functional fixation.
Evidence suggests the market’s reaction to news events is immediate and
unbiased. Consider the market’s reaction to earnings announcements as
reported in two illustrative studies: Lee (1992) and Landsman and Maydew
78
The parallels here are Jensen and Meckling’s (1976) agency theory to explain deviations from
the Modigliani and Miller (1958) and Miller and Modigliani (1961) no-effects predictions for
corporate finance in frictionless markets, and Watts and Zimmerman’s (1978) contracting and
political cost hypotheses to explain firms’ preference among alternative accounting methods in
informationally efficient capital markets.
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 193

(1999). Lee (1992) uses intra-day return and trading volume data. He observes a
statistically significant price reaction of the same sign as the earnings surprise. The
reaction occurs within 30 min of the earnings announcement, with no statistically
discernible price effect thereafter. Investors’ trading volume reaction reported in
Lee (1992) is also short lived: less than 2 h for large trades and a few hours for
small trades. Landsman and Maydew (1999) analyze the market’s reactions to
earnings announcements over three decades. They too find that the stock return
volatility and trading volume are significantly greater on earnings announcement
days, but the activity reverts to normal conditions immediately thereafter.
The above findings reinforce previous evidence in Beaver (1968) and May
(1971) using weekly price and trading volume data around annual and
quarterly earnings announcement dates and Patell and Wolfson’s (1984)
intraday return analysis around earnings announcements. Other research offers
a variety of refinements to suggest that the market predictably discriminates
between different types of news announcements and the information content of
those announcements. For example, several studies report an inverse relation
between the information content (i.e., price and trading volume reaction) of
earnings announcements and transaction costs and pre-disclosure (or interim)
information (see Grant, 1980; Atiase, 1985, 1987; Bamber, 1987; Shores, 1990;
Lee, 1992; Landsman and Maydew, 1999). Others examine the effects of audit
quality, seasonality, accrual errors in first three quarters versus the fourth
quarter, transitory earnings, etc. on the stock price reaction to earnings
announcements (e.g., Teoh and Wong, 1993; Salamon and Stober, 1994;
Freeman and Tse, 1992) and find evidence generally consistent with rationality
in the cross-sectional variation in the market’s response.
Long-horizon tests: There has been a surge of research on long-horizon tests of
market efficiency in recent years. Collectively this research reports economically
large abnormal returns following many events. As noted earlier, there are
methodological questions about this evidence. I review the evidence of long-
horizon abnormal performance following earnings announcements, accrual
management, analysts’ forecast optimism, and accounting method changes.

4.4.2.1. Post-earnings-announcement drift. Post-earnings-announcement drift


is the predictability of abnormal returns following earnings announcements. Since
the drift is of the same sign as the earnings change, it suggests the market
underreacts to information in earnings announcements. Ball and Brown (1968)
first observe the drift. It has been more precisely documented in many subsequent
studies.79 The drift lasts up to a year and the magnitude is both statistically and

79
See Jones and Litzenberger (1970), Brown and Kennelly (1972), Joy et al. (1977), Watts (1978),
Foster et al. (1984), Rendleman et al. (1987), Bernard and Thomas (1989, 1990), Freeman and Tse
(1989), Mendenhall (1991), Wiggins (1991), Bartov (1992), Bhushan (1994), Ball and Bartov (1996),
and Bartov et al. (2000), among others.
194 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

economically significant for the extreme good and bad earnings news portfolios.
A disproportionate fraction of the drift is concentrated in the three-day periods
surrounding future quarterly earnings announcements, as opposed to exhibiting a
gradually drifting abnormal return behavior. Because of this characteristic and
because almost all of the drift appears within one year, I characterize the drift as a
short-window phenomenon, rather than a long-horizon performance anomaly.
The profession has subjected the drift anomaly to a battery of tests, but a
rational, economic explanation for the drift remains elusive.
The property of the drift that is most damaging to the efficient market
hypothesis is documented in detail in Rendleman et al. (1987), Freeman and Tse
(1989), and Bernard and Thomas (1989, 1990). Collectively, these studies show
that the post-earnings-announcement abnormal returns are consistent with the
market acting as if quarterly earnings follow a seasonal random walk process,
whereas the true earnings process is more complicated. In particular, the true
process might be more accurately described as a seasonally differenced first-order
auto-regressive process with a seasonal moving-average term to reflect the
seasonal negative autocorrelation (Brown and Rozeff, 1979). A large fraction of
the drift occurs on subsequent earnings announcement dates and the drift
consistently has the predicted sign for the extreme earnings portfolios. These
properties diminish the likelihood of an efficient markets explanation for the drift.
Numerous studies seek to refine our understanding of the drift. Ball and
Bartov (1996) show that the market is not entirely na.ıve in recognizing the
time-series properties of quarterly earnings. However, their evidence suggests
the market underestimates the parameters of the true process. So, there is
predictability of stock performance at subsequent earnings announcement
dates. Burgstahler et al. (1999) extend the Ball and Bartov (1996) result by
examining the market’s reaction to special items in earnings. Their results also
suggest the market only partially reflects the transitory nature of special items.
Soffer and Lys (1999) dispute Ball and Bartov’s (1996) results. Using a two-
stage process to infer investors’ earnings expectations, Soffer and Lys (1999,
p. 323) ‘‘are unable to reject the null hypothesis that investors’ earnings
expectations do not reflect any of the implications of prior earnings for future
earnings’’. Abarbanell and Bernard (1992) conclude that the market’s failure to
accurately process the time-series properties of earnings is due in part to
dependence in analysts’ forecast errors (also see Lys and Sohn, 1990; Klein,
1990; Abarbanell, 1991; Mendenhall, 1991; Ali et al., 1999).
Research attempting to understand whether the market’s earnings expecta-
tions are na.ıve has used security prices to infer the expectations. While this
approach has many desirable properties, J. Thomas (1999) warns of the danger
of incorrect inferences and Brown (1999) proposes an alternative approach
examining whether the time-series properties of analysts’ forecasts exhibit the
na.ıve property. If not, then the search for alternative explanations for the
observed security return behavior gains credibility.
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 195

Bhushan (1994) shows that the magnitude of the drift is positively correlated
with the degree of trading frictions, which makes commercial attempts to exploit
the drift economically less attractive. Bartov et al. (2000) examine whether the
magnitude of the drift is decreasing in investor sophistication, as proxied for by
the extent of institutional ownership in a stock (see Hand, 1990; Utama and
Cready, 1997; Walther, 1997; El-Gazzar, 1998). Brown and Han (2000) examine
predictability of returns for the subset of firms whose earnings exhibit first-order
auto-regressive property, which is far less complex than the Brown and Rozeff
(1979) model. They conclude that the market fails to recognize the autoregressive
earnings property only for firms that have relatively less pre-disclosure
information (i.e., small firms with relatively unsophisticated investors). Even in
these cases, they find the drift ifs asymmetric in that the drift is observed for large
positive, but not negative, earnings surprises.80
Attempts to explain the drift on the basis of transaction costs and
investor sophistication, in my opinion, are not entirely satisfying. Since a
non-trivial fraction of the drift shows up on one-to-three-quarters-ahead
earnings announcement days, there is a substantial opportunity for a number
of market participants to exploit the mispricing, at least in the case of stocks
experiencing good earnings news. Many of these market participants likely
engage in trades in similar stocks for other reasons, so the marginal transaction
costs to exploit the drift are expected to be small. Risk mismeasurement is also
unlikely to explain the drift because the drift is observed in almost every
quarter and because it is concentrated in a few days around earnings
announcements.
Another stream of research in the accounting and finance literature examines
whether the post-earnings announcement drift (or the earnings-to-price effect)
is incremental to or subsumed by other anomalies (see Fama and French
(1996), Bernard et al. (1997), Chan et al. (1996), Raedy (1998), Kraft (1999),
and discussion in Section 4.4.3). The anomalies examined include the size,
book-to-market, earnings-to-price, momentum, industry, trading volume,
long-term contrarian investment strategy, past sales growth, and fundamental
analysis effects, and combinations of these effects.81 Kraft (1999) concludes

80
Since Brown and Han (2000) focus on a relatively small fraction (20%) of the population of
firms, their tests might have lower power.
81
The following studies report evidence on the anomalies: Banz (1981) on the size effect; Basu
(1977, 1983) on the earnings-to-price effect; Rosenberg et al. (1985) and Fama and French (1992)
on the book-to-market effect; Lakonishok et al. (1994) on the sales growth (or value-versus-
glamour) and cash-flow-to-price effects; DeBondt and Thaler (1985, 1987) on the long-term
contrarian effect; Jegadeesh and Titman (1993) and Rouwenhorst (1998) on the short-term
momentum effect; Moskowitz and Grinblatt (1999) on the industry-factor effects to explain the
momentum effect; Lee and Swaminathan (2000) on the momentum and trading volume effects; and
Lev and Thiagarajan (1993) and Abarbanell and Bushee (1997, 1998) on the fundamental analysis
effect.
196 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

that other anomalies or the Fama–French three-factor model (see Fama and
French, 1993) do not subsume the drift, whereas evidence in Fama and French
(1996) suggests that their three-factor model explains the earnings-to-price
effect.
4.4.2.1.1. Summary. The post-earnings announcement drift anomaly poses
a serious challenge to the efficient markets hypothesis. It has survived a battery
of tests in Bernard and Thomas (1989, 1990) and many other attempts to
explain it away. It appears to be incremental to a long list of anomalies that are
inconsistent with the joint hypothesis of market efficiency and an equilibrium
asset-pricing model. The survival of the anomaly 30 years after it was first
discovered leads me to believe that there is a rational explanation for it, but
evidence consistent with rationality remains elusive.

4.4.2.2. Accounting methods, method changes and functional fixation


4.4.2.2.1. Research design issues. Capital markets research has long
examined whether the stock market is efficient with respect to cross-sectional
differences in firms’ use of accounting methods and to changes in accounting
methods. Since most accounting method choices do not in themselves create a
cash flow effect, tests of market efficiency with respect to accounting methods
have been an easy target. However, this has proved to be one of the more
difficult topics. Firms’ choice of accounting methods and their decisions to
change methods are not exogenous. Cross-sectional differences in firms’
accounting method choice potentially reflect underlying economic differences
(e.g., differences in investment–financing decisions, growth opportunities, debt
and compensation contracts, etc.; see Watts and Zimmerman, 1986, 1990). The
economic differences contribute to variations in the expected rates of return
and price–earnings multiples. Therefore, an assessment of the pricing of
accounting effects is clouded by the effect of underlying economic differences
among the firms.
Accounting method change events also have their pros and cons in
testing market efficiency. Managers’ decisions to change accounting
methods typically follow unusual economic performance and accounting
method changes might be associated with changes in the firms’ investment
and financing decisions. For example, Ball (1972), Sunder (1975), and Brown
(1980) find that the average earnings and stock-return performance of
firms switching to income-decreasing LIFO inventory method are above
normal in the period leading up to the inventory accounting method
change. Since changes in economic performance and changes in invest-
ment and financing decisions are generally associated with changes in
expected rates of return, accurate assessment of long-horizon risk-adjusted
performance following accounting method changes is tricky. Another practical
problem with an event study approach to accounting method changes is that
many firms do not publicly announce the accounting method change, so there
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 197

can be considerable uncertainty associated with the date the market learns
about the method change.82
Another problem is that surprise announcements of accounting method
changes themselves often convey information that causes market participants
to reassess firm value.83 For example, the market frequently greets firms’
announcements of changes in capitalization and revenue recognition policies
with large price swings (e.g., on March 18, 1992, Chambers Development Co.
experiences a –63% stock price reaction to its announcement that it would
expense instead of capitalize development costs; see Revsine et al., 1999, pp.
19–23). Some academics and the financial press interpret the reaction as the
market’s fixation on reported accounting numbers because the accounting
method change in itself did not affect the firm’s cash flow for the accounting
period. The reasoning is only partially right in that the accounting method
change might easily have influenced the market’s expectation of future cash
flows. Thus, in order to interpret the market’s reaction to accounting method
changes as consistent with market efficiency, one must model changes in cash
flow expectations concurrent with the accounting method change and other
cash flow effects arising from contracting, tax, and/or regulatory considera-
tions.
4.4.2.2.2. Evidence: accounting method differences. A large body of literature
examines whether the market is mechanically fixated on reported earnings. The
conclusion that emerges from this literature is that broadly speaking the
market rationally discriminates between non-cash earnings effects arising from
the use of different accounting methods. However, an unresolved and
contentious question is whether there is a modest degree of inefficiency. I
believe the evidence is fairly strong that managerial behavior is consistent with
the market behaving as if it is functionally fixated on reported accounting
numbers, but that the security price behavior itself is at worst only modestly
consistent with functional fixation.
Beaver and Dukes (1973) is probably the first study to examine whether the
stock market rationally recognizes the non-cash effects of accounting methods
on reported earnings in setting security prices. They compare the price–
earnings ratios of firms using accelerated and straight-line depreciation
methods. Consistent with market efficiency, they find that accelerated
depreciation firms’ price–earnings ratios exceed those of straight-line deprecia-
tion method firm. Moreover, the difference more or less disappears once the
straight-line depreciation method firms’ earnings are restated to those obtained
under the accelerated depreciation method. Additional analysis also reveals
82
With increasing pressure on firms to publicly disclose accounting events like method changes
and the decreasing costs of electronically searching for the information, it is easier in today’s
environment to precisely identify the announcement date of an accounting method change.
83
See the literature on signaling and voluntary disclosure.
198 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

that the accelerated and straight-line depreciation samples of firms did not
exhibit statistically or economically significant differences in systematic risk or
earnings growth (see Beaver and Dukes, 1973, Table 2).
Many other studies examine market efficiency with respect to accounting
method differences. Lee (1988) and Dhaliwal et al. (2000) examine differences
in price–earnings ratios between LIFO and non-LIFO firms. Dukes
(1976) shows that the market values research and development costs as an
asset even though they are expensed for reporting purposes (also see Lev and
Sougiannis, 1996; Aboody and Lev, 1998). Evidence also suggests that the
market began to reflect pension liabilities even before they appeared on
financial statements (Dhaliwal, 1986) and a firm’s risk reflects the debt
equivalence of operating leases (see Lipe (2000, Section 2.3.2) for a summary of
evidence).
While there is considerable evidence consistent with market efficiency, some
discordant notes coexist. Vincent (1997) and Jennings et al. (1996) examine
stock prices of firms using the purchase and pooling-of-interests accounting
methods for mergers and acquisitions. They find that firms using the purchase
accounting method are disadvantaged. The authors compare the price–
earnings ratios of the firms using the pooling method to those using the
purchase method. For this comparison, they restate earnings numbers of the
pooling method firms as if these firms used the purchase accounting method.
They find that the price–earnings ratios of the pooling method firms are higher
than the purchase accounting method users.
The Vincent (1997) and Jennings et al. (1996) evidence is consistent with the
conventional wisdom among investment bankers that Wall Street rewards
reported earnings and thus prefers pooling-of-interests earnings. Regardless of
whether the conventional wisdom is valid in terms of security price behavior, it
appears to have a real effect on the pricing of acquisitions accounted for using
the pooling or purchase method. Nathan (1988), Robinson and Shane (1990),
and Ayers et al. (1999) all report that bidders pay a premium for a transaction
to be accounted for as pooling of interests. Lys and Vincent (1995) in their case
study of AT&T’s acquisition of NCR, conclude that AT&T spent about $50 to
possibly as much as $500 million to account for the acquisition using the
pooling method.
To complement the analysis of pricing and premium magnitudes in
pooling and purchase accounting, researchers also examine long-horizon
returns following merger events accounted for using the pooling and
purchase methods. Hong et al. (1978) and Davis (1990) are early studies
of acquirers’ post-merger abnormal returns. They examine whether abnormal
returns to acquirers using the purchase method are negative, consistent
with the market reacting negatively to goodwill amortization after the
merger. Neither study finds evidence of the market’s fixation on reported
earnings.
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 199

Rau and Vermaelen (1998) and Andrade (1999) reexamine post-merger


performance of pooling and purchase method users employing state-of-the-art
techniques to estimate long-horizon abnormal returns and using larger samples
of mergers from recent decades. They reach somewhat opposite conclusions.
Rau and Vermaelen (1998) compare the post-merger returns of a third of the
acquirers reporting the largest earnings impact of merger accounting against
the middle and lowest third of the acquirers ranked according to the merger
earnings impact. The post-merger one-, two-, or three-year returns for the three
samples are not statistically different from zero or different from each other.
Andrade (1999) also examines the post-merger performance, but uses
regression analysis with controls for a large number of confounding variables.
He finds a positive and statistically significant 18-month abnormal return effect
attributable to the merger-accounting impact on earnings. However, the effect
is ‘‘one order of magnitude smaller than implied by practitioners’ views’’
(Andrade, 1999, Abstract). He therefore concludes that ‘‘it makes little sense
for managers to expend time, effort, and resources in structuring the deal so as
to improve its impact on reported EPS’’ (Andrade, 1999, p. 35).
Andrade (1999) also analyzes merger announcement-period returns to test
whether the market reaction is increasing in the merger-accounting-earnings
effect. He observes a statistically significant, but economically small positive
impact of merger accounting earnings. This is weakly consistent with
functional fixation. Hand (1990) advances an ‘‘extended’’ version of the
functional fixation hypothesis. It argues that the likelihood that the market is
functionally fixated is decreasing in investor sophistication. Hand (1990) and
Andrade (1999) find evidence consistent with extended functional fixation in
different types of accounting event studies.84 This is similar to the negative
relation between the magnitude of post-earnings-announcement drift and
investor sophistication discussed earlier in this section.
Summary: Differences in accounting methods (e.g., purchase versus pooling
accounting for mergers and acquisitions) can produce large differences in
reported financial statement numbers without any difference in the firm’s cash
flows. We do not observe systematic, large differences in the prices of firms
employing different accounting methods. This rules out noticeable magnitudes
of market fixation on reported financial statement numbers. There is some
evidence, however, to suggest that over long horizons differences in accounting
methods produce measurable differences in risk-adjusted stock returns.
Whether these abnormal returns suggest a modest degree of market in
efficiency or they are a manifestation of the problems in accurately measuring
long-horizon price performance is unresolved.

84
See Ball and Kothari (1991) for theory and evidence that calls into question the extended
functional fixation hypothesis.
200 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

4.4.2.2.3. Accounting method changes. Accounting method changes are


distinct from accounting method differences in that method changes are the
consequence of a deliberate action to change a method at a point in time and
are thus amenable to an event study centered on the event of accounting
method change. In contrast, accounting method differences between firms can
persist indefinitely so long as firms continue with their respective accounting
methods. Thus, there is no accounting event and therefore samples of firms
with accounting method differences are typically not amenable to an event
study.
Some of the earliest capital markets research analyzes accounting method
changes as a means of testing market efficiency (see, for example, Ball, 1972;
Kaplan and Roll, 1972; Archibald, 1972; Sunder, 1973, 1975). Collectively this
research examines security returns at the time of and surrounding accounting
method changes. Conclusions from this research are that the announcement
effects of accounting method changes are generally small and the long-horizon
performance of firms making accounting method changes is inconclusive with
respect to the efficient markets hypothesis. The lack of conclusive results is
because of cash flow effects of some method changes (e.g., switch to and from
LIFO inventory method) and the endogenous and voluntary nature of
accounting method changes. Therefore, there are information effects and
potential changes in the determinants of expected returns associated with the
method changes. In addition, much progress has been made in estimating the
long-horizon performance in an event study (see Barber and Lyon, 1997;
Kothari and Warner, 1997; Barber et al., 1999).
Many studies examine the stock-price effects of accounting method changes.
Studies on firms’ switch to and from LIFO inventory method are particularly
popular; see, for example, Ricks (1982), Biddle and Lindahl (1982), Hand
(1993, 1995). Evidence from these studies remains mixed. However, with the
exception of Dharan and Lev (1993), a study that carefully re-examines long-
horizon stock-price performance around accounting method changes using
state-of-the-art long-horizon performance measurement techniques is sorely
missing from the literature. Such a study would be timely in part because the
long-horizon market inefficiency hypothesis has acquired currency in academic
as well as practitioner circles.

4.4.2.3. Long-horizon returns to accrual management and analyst forecast


optimism
4.4.2.3.1. The logic. Several studies examine long-horizon stock market
efficiency with respect to accrual management and analysts’ optimistic earnings
growth forecasts. The crux of the argument is that information from firms’
owners and/or managers and financial analysts about firms’ prospects (e.g.,
earnings growth) reflects their optimism and that the market behaves naively in
that it takes the optimistic forecasts at face value.
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 201

Firms’ owners and managers and financial analysts have an incentive to issue
optimistic forecasts.85 Owners and managers issuing new equity can reap
benefits if the issue price is inflated. Owners and managers are hypothesized to
attempt to inflate the price of initial public offerings or seasoned equity
offerings by influencing the market’s expectations of future earnings. Toward
this end, they manipulate upward reported earnings through discretionary
accounting accruals.
Financial analysts’ incentive to issue optimistic forecasts stems from the fact
that the investment-banking firms they work for derive benefits from
investment banking and brokerage business of the client firms. Optimistic
forecasts potentially generate greater business from the clients. In addition,
optimistic forecasts might induce client managements to share private
information with the financial analysts.
The cost of accrual management and optimistic forecasts is a loss of
credibility and reputation for accuracy in the event that accrual management
and forecast optimism are detected. In addition, there is the potential danger of
facing lawsuits and civil and criminal penalties for fraud in the event of an
eventual decline in share prices when future earnings realizations suggest
forecast optimism. Owners, managers, and financial analysts must trade off the
potential benefits against the costs. The benefits from accrual manipulation and
analysts’ optimism obviously depend in part on the success in inflating security
prices. The market’s failure to recognize the optimistic bias in accruals and
analysts’ forecasts requires a theory of market inefficiency that is still being
developed and tested in the literature. There are at least three reasons for
systematic mispricing of stocks resulting from the market’s na.ıve reliance on
optimistic information. They are the presence of frictions and transaction costs
of trading, limits on market participants’ ability to arbitrage away mispricing,
and behavioral biases that are correlated among market participants (e.g., herd
behavior). Capital markets research testing market efficiency primarily
examines whether there is evidence of accrual manipulation and forecast
optimism and whether securities are systematically mispriced. The literature in
accounting is yet to develop theories of market inefficiency, which have begun
to appear in the finance and economics journals.
4.4.2.3.2. Evidence. Several studies present challenging evidence to suggest
that discretionary accruals in periods immediately prior to initial public
offerings and seasoned equity offerings are positive.86 Evidence in these studies
also suggests the market fails to recognize the earnings manipulation, which is
inferred on the basis of predictable subsequent negative long-horizon price

85
Managers’ incentives are assumed to be aligned with owners’ incentives. In an IPO, this
assumption is descriptive because managers are often also major owners and/or managers have
substantial equity positions typically in the form of stock options.
86
See Teoh et al. (1998a–c), Teoh and Wong (1999), and Rangan (1998).
202 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

performance. Negative, statistically significant cross-sectional association


between ex ante estimated accrual manipulation and stocks’ ex post price
performance exists, which violates market efficiency.
A well-developed literature examines whether analysts’ forecasts are
optimistic at the time of initial or seasoned equity offerings. Hansen and
Sarin (1996), Ali (1996), and Lin and McNichols (1998a) fail to find optimism
in short-term analysts’ forecasts around equity offerings. Lin and McNichols
(1998a) and Dechow et al. (2000) hypothesize that analysts’ long-term forecasts
might be optimistic because the market places less emphasis on the accuracy of
long-term forecasts and long-term forecasts are more relevant for valuation
than short-term forecasts. The Lin and McNichols (1998a) and Dechow et al.
(2000) evidence on long-term forecast optimism is conflicting: Lin and
McNichols (1998a, Table 2, p. 113) report negligible optimistic bias (lead
analysts forecast 21.29% growth versus unaffiliated analysts forecast 20.73%
growth), whereas the Dechow et al. (2000, Table 2, p. 16) evidence suggests a
large bias (affiliated analysts 23.3% versus unaffiliated analysts 16.5%).
Dechow et al. argue that stocks’ long-horizon negative performance following
seasoned equity offerings is due to the market’s na.ıve fixation on analysts’
optimistic long-term earnings growth forecasts. They show that the bias in
analysts’ long-term growth forecasts is increasing in the growth forecast, and
post-equity-offer performance is negatively related to the growth rate at the
time of the equity offers. Unlike Dechow et al., Lin and McNichols (1998a) do
not find a difference in future returns.
Research also examines whether analysts affiliated with the investment-
banking firm providing client services are more optimistic in their earnings
forecasts and stock recommendations than unaffiliated analysts’ forecasts.
Rajan and Servaes (1997), Lin and McNichols (1998a), and Dechow et al.
(2000) all report that affiliated analysts issue more optimistic growth forecasts
than unaffiliated analysts. Similarly, Michaely and Womack (1999) and Lin
and McNichols (1998a, b) find that affiliated analysts’ stock recommendations
are more favorable than unaffiliated analysts’ recommendations.
4.4.2.3.3. Assessment of the evidence. The body of evidence in this area
challenges market efficiency. However, there are several research design issues
that are worth addressing in future research. Many of these are discussed
elsewhere in the review. First, as discussed in the context of discretionary
accrual models (Section 4.1.4), estimation of discretionary accruals for non-
random samples of firms like IPO firms and seasoned equity offering firms is
problematic. Long horizons further complicate the tests. In addition, the
evidence in Collins and Hribar (2000b) that previous findings of accrual
manipulation in seasoned equity offering firms using the balance sheet method
might be spurious is damaging to the market inefficiency hypothesis not only
because of problems in estimating discretionary accruals but also for the
following logical reason. Consider the evidence in Teoh et al. (1998a) that
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 203

estimated discretionary accruals of seasoned equity offering firms are


negatively correlated with subsequent returns. Collins and Hribar (2000b)
show that the estimated discretionary accruals are biased (i.e., accrual
manipulation result is spurious) and that the bias is correlated with the
seasoned equity offering firms’ merger and acquisition activity. This means
subsequent abnormal returns are unrelated to management’s discretionary
accruals, and instead appear to be correlated with firms’ merger and
acquisition activity. Thus, either the market is fixated on discretionary accruals
or the market commits systematic errors in processing the valuation
implications of merger and acquisition activity. As always, the possibility of
some other phenomenon driving the return behavior following seasoned equity
offerings exists.
Second, the association between ex ante growth forecasts or other variables
and ex post performance variables might be spuriously strengthened because of
survivor biases and data truncation (see Kothari et al. (1999b), and discussion
earlier in this section).
Third, long-horizon performance measurement is problematic. Techniques
that recognize long-horizon issues should be used to estimate abnormal
performance (e.g., the Carhart (1997) four-factor model or the Fama and
French (1993) three-factor model, or the Daniel et al. (1997) characteristic-
based approach). Some argue that the three- and four-factor models in the
finance literature are empirically motivated and lack a utility-based theoretical
foundation. More importantly, these models might over-correct for the
systematic component in stock returns in that returns to factors like book-
to-market might indicate systematic mispricing, i.e., market inefficiency (see,
e.g., Dechow et al., 2000). Even if empirically motivated factors were to merely
capture systematic mispricing (rather than represent compensation for risk), it
is important to control for these factors in estimating abnormal returns. The
reason is straightforward. Researchers typically test whether a treatment
variable or an event generates abnormal performance. If similar performance is
also produced by another variable, like firm size to book to market, then it
becomes less plausible that the observed performance is attributable to the
treatment variable or the event. Abnormal performance can be realized by
simply investing in potentially many stocks of similar characteristics regardless
of whether or not they experience the event studied by the researcher.
Finally, classification of affiliated and unaffiliated analysts is not exogenous.
As discussed in the section on the properties of analysts’ forecasts, it is possible
that firms choose those investment bankers whose analysts are (genuinely)
most optimistic (i.e., give the highest forecasts) from among all the analysts.87
So, we expect the affiliated analysts to have larger forecast errors than the

87
If my assumption is not descriptive of the process of selection of an affiliated analyst
investment-banking firm, the criticism is not applicable.
204 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

unaffiliated analysts. Therefore, the evidence that affiliated analysts’ forecasts


are more biased than unaffiliated analysts’ forecasts is not particularly helpful.
Research must attempt to demonstrate that analysts bias their forecasts
upward because of the lure of investment-banking business (i.e., demonstrate
causality).

4.4.3. Cross-sectional tests of return predictability


Cross-sectional tests of return predictability differ from event studies in
two respects. First, to be included in the analysis, firms need not experience
a specific event like seasoned equity issue. Second, return predictability
tests typically analyze returns on portfolios of stocks with specific character-
istics (e.g., quintile of stocks reporting largest ratios of accruals to total
assets or extreme analysts’ forecasts) starting with a common date each year,
whereas the event date in event studies is typically not clustered in calendar
time.
Cross-sectional return predictability tests of market efficiency almost
invariably examine long-horizon returns, so they face the problems discussed
previously. Four problems are worth revisiting. First, expected return
mismeasurement can be serious in long-horizon tests. Second, researchers
typically focus on stocks exhibiting extreme characteristics (e.g., extreme
accruals) that are correlated with unusual prior performance, so changes in the
determinants of expected return are likely to be correlated with the portfolio
formation procedure. Third, survival bias and data problems can be serious, in
particular if the researcher examines extreme performance stocks. Finally, since
there is perfect clustering in calendar time, tests that fail to control for cross-
correlation likely overstate the significance of the results.
There are two types of cross-sectional return predictability tests frequently
conducted in accounting: predictability tests that examine performance on the
basis of univariate indicators of market’s mispricing (e.g., earnings yield,
accruals, or analysts’ forecasts) and tests that evaluate the performance of
multivariate indicators like the fundamental value of a firm relative to its
market value (e.g., Ou and Penman, 1989a, b; Abarbanell and Bushee, 1997,
1998; Frankel and Lee, 1998; Piotroski, 2000). Both sets of tests provide strong
evidence challenging market efficiency. Both univariate and multivariate
indicators of mispricing generate large magnitudes of abnormal performance
over a one-to-three-year post-portfolio-formation periods. The focus of future
research should be to address some of the problems I have discussed above in
reevaluating the findings of the current research from return-predictability
tests. I summarize below the evidence from the two types of return-
predictability tests.

4.4.3.1. Return predictability using univariate indicators of mispricing. Early


tests of return predictability using univariate indicators of mispricing used
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 205

earnings yield (e.g., Basu, 1977, 1983). This evidence attracted considerable
attention in the literature and the evidence from the earnings yield and other
anomalies eventually led to multi-beta CAPM models like the Fama–French
three-factor (i.e., market, size, and book-to-market) model or Carhart (1997)
four-factor model that also includes momentum as a factor.
The recent flurry of research in return-predictability tests examines whether
indicators other than earnings yield generate long-horizon abnormal perfor-
mance. Examples of this research include the Lakonishok et al. (1994) tests
based on cash flow yield and sales growth; the LaPorta (1996) and Dechow and
Sloan (1997) tests of market overreaction stemming from analysts’ optimism;
and the Sloan (1996), Collins and Hribar (2000a, b) and Xie (1999) tests of the
market’s overreaction to extreme accrual portfolios.
The theme most common in this literature is that the market overreacts to
univariate indicators of firm value and it corrects itself over a long horizon.
The overreaction represents market participants’ na.ıve fixation on reported
numbers and their tendency to extrapolate past performance. However,
because there is mean reversion in the extremes (e.g., Brooks and Buckmaster,
1976), the market’s initial reaction to extreme univariate indicators of value
overshoots fundamental valuation, and thus provides an opportunity to earn
abnormal returns.88
While many of the univariate indicators of return-predictability suggest
market overreaction, using both cash flow and earnings yield as indicators of
market mispricing suggests market underreaction. One challenge is to
understand why the market underreacts to earnings, but its reaction to its
two components, cash flows and accruals, is conflicting. Previous evidence
suggests that the market underreacts to cash flow and overreacts to accruals.
Recently research has begun to address these issues theoretically as well as
empirically. For example, Bradshaw et al. (1999) examine whether professional
analysts understand the mean reversion property of extreme accruals. They
find that analysts do not incorporate the mean reversion property of extreme
accruals in their earnings forecasts. Bradshaw et al. (1999, p. 2) therefore
conclude ‘‘investors do not fully anticipate the negative implications of
unusually high accruals’’. While Bradshaw et al.’s explanation is helpful in
understanding return predictability using accruals, it would be of interest to
examine whether similar logic can explain the cash flow and earnings yield
anomalies. Extreme earnings and cash flows are also mean reverting. What is
predicted about analysts’ forecasts with respect to these two variables and how
does that explain the market’s underreaction to earnings?

88
Variations of the overreaction and extrapolation of past performance arguments appear in the
following studies. Lakonishok et al. (1994) in the context of past sales growth and current cash flow
and earnings yield; Sloan (1996) in the context of accruals; and LaPorta (1996) and Dechow and
Sloan (1997) in the context of analysts’ forecasts.
206 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

While much evidence suggests market over- and under-reaction, other


studies are inconsistent with such market behavior. For example, Abarbanell
and Bernard (2000) fail to detect the stock market’s myopic fixation on current
performance, i.e., market overreaction. Ali et al. (1999) undertake a different
approach to understand whether market participants’ na.ıvet!e contributes
to cross-sectional return predictability using accruals. As several re-
searchers hypothesize in the post-earnings-announcement drift literature, Ali
et al. (1999) test whether returns to the accruals strategy are greater in
magnitude for the high transaction cost, low analyst following, and low
institutional ownership stocks. The literature hypothesizes these characteristics
proxy for low investor sophistication, so a given level of accrual extremity in
these stocks should yield greater magnitudes of abnormal returns than high
investor sophistication stocks. Ali et al. (1999) do not find significant
correlation between investor sophistication and abnormal returns. Zhang
(2000) draws a similar conclusion in the context of market’s fixation on analyst
forecast optimism and auto-correlation in forecast revisions. These findings
make it less likely that returns to the accrual strategy and apparent return
reversals following analysts’ optimistic forecasts arise from investors’
functional fixation. The evidence makes it more likely that the apparent
abnormal returns represent compensation for omitted risk factors, statistical
and survival biases in the research design, biases in long-horizon performance
assessment, or period-specific nature of the anomaly. Naturally, further
research is warranted.

4.4.3.2. Return predictability using multivariate indicators of mispricing. Ou


and Penman (1989a, b) use a composite earnings change probability measure
called Pr. They estimate the Pr measure from a statistical data reduction analysis
using a variety of financial ratios. The Pr measure indicates the likelihood of a
positive or negative earnings change. Ou and Penman (1989a, b) report positive
abnormal returns to the Pr-measure-based fundamental strategy.
The Ou and Penman (1989a, b) studies attracted a great deal of attention in
the literature. They rejuvenated fundamental analysis research in accounting,
even though their own findings appear frail in retrospect. Holthausen and
Larcker (1992) find that the Pr strategy does not work in a period subsequent
to that examined in Ou and Penman (1989a, b). Stober (1992) and Greig (1992)
interpret returns to the Pr strategy as compensation for risk. Stober (1992)
reports that abnormal performance to the Pr strategy continues for six years
and Greig (1992) finds that size subsumes the Pr effect.
Lev and Thiagarajan (1993), Abarbanell and Bushee (1997, 1998), and
Piotroski (2000) extend the Ou and Penman analysis by exploiting traditional
rules of financial-ratio-based fundamental analysis to earn abnormal returns.
They find that the resulting fundamental strategies pay double-digit abnormal
returns in a 12-month period following the portfolio-formation date. The
S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231 207

conclusion of the market’s sluggish adjustment to the information in the ratios


is strengthened by the fact that future abnormal returns appear to be
concentrated around earnings announcement dates when the earnings
predictions of the analysis come true (see Piotroski, 2000).
Frankel and Lee (1998), Dechow et al. (1999), and Lee et al. (1999) extend
the multivariate fundamental analysis to estimating stocks’ fundamental values
and investing in mispriced stocks as suggested by their fundamental values.
They use the residual income model combined with analysts’ forecasts to
estimate fundamental values and show that abnormal returns can be earned.89

5. Summary and conclusions

In this paper I review research on the relation between capital markets and
financial statement information. I use an economics-based framework of
demand for and supply of capital markets research in accounting to organize
the paper. The principal sources of demand for capital markets research are
fundamental analysis and valuation, tests of market efficiency, the role of
accounting in contracts and in the political process, and disclosure regulation.
In summarizing past research, I critique existing research as well as discuss
unresolved issues and directions for future research. In addition, I offer a
historical perspective of the genesis of important ideas in the accounting
literature, which have greatly influenced future accounting thought in the area
of capital markets research. An exploration of the circumstances, forces, and
concurrent developments that led to significant breakthroughs in the literature
will hopefully guide future accounting researchers in their career investment
decisions.
Ball and Brown (1968) heralded capital markets research into accounting.
Key features of their research, i.e., positive economics championed by Milton
Friedman, Fama’s efficient markets hypothesis, and the event study research
design in Fama et al. (1969), were the cornerstones of the economics and
finance research taking place concurrently at the University of Chicago.
History repeated itself with Watts and Zimmerman’s positive accounting
theory research in the late 1970s. While the above are just two examples, many
other developments in accounting are also influenced by concurrent research
and ideas in related fields. The important conclusion here is that rigorous
training in and an on-going attempt to remain abreast of fields beyond
accounting will enhance the probability of successful, high-impact research.
89
Lee et al. (1999) results are also somewhat frail in that they fail to find abnormal returns unless
they use information in the short-term risk-free rates in calculating fundamental values. Since
fundamental analysis never emphasized the importance of, let alone the need of, information in
short-term interest rates, I interpret their evidence as not strong.
208 S.P. Kothari / Journal of Accounting and Economics 31 (2001) 105–231

Section 4 surveys empirical capital markets research. The topics include


methodological research (e.g., earnings response coefficients, time series and
analysts’ forecasts, and models of discretionary accruals); research examining
alternative performance measures; valuation and fundamental analysis
research; and finally, accounting research on tests of market efficiency. The
areas of greatest current interest appear to be research on discretionary
accruals, influence of analysts’ incentives on the properties of their forecasts,
valuation and fundamental analysis, and tests of market efficiency. The revival
of interest in fundamental analysis is rooted in the mounting evidence that
suggests capital markets might be informationally inefficient and that prices
might take years before they fully reflect available information. Fundamental
valuation can yield a rich return in an inefficient market. A large body of
research demonstrates economically significant abnormal returns spread over
several years by implementing fundamental analysis trading strategies.
Evidence suggesting market inefficiency has also reshaped the nature of
questions addressed in the earnings management literature. Specifically, the
motivation for earnings management research has expanded from contracting
and political process considerations in an efficient market to include earnings
management designed to influence prices because investors and the market
might be fixated on (or might over- or under-react to) reported financial
statement numbers.
Evidence of market inefficiency and abnormal returns to fundamental
analysis has triggered a surge in research testing market efficiency. Such
research interests academics, investors, and financial market regulators and
standard setters. The current rage is examination of long-horizon security price
performance. However, this research is methodologically complicated because
of skewed distributions of financial variables, survival biases in data, and
difficulties in estimating the expected rate of return on a security. Progress is
possible in testing market efficiency if attention is paid to the following issues.
First, researchers must recognize that deficient research design choices can
create the false appearance of market inefficiency. Second, advocates of market
inefficiency should propose robust hypotheses and empirical tests to
differentiate their behavioral-finance theories from the efficient market
hypothesis that does not rely on investor irrationality. The above challenges
in designing better tests and refutable theories of market inefficiency under-
score the need for accounting researchers trained in cutting-edge research in
economics, finance, and econometrics.

6. Uncited References

Brown, 1991; Penman, 1992.


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