Capital Markets Research in Accounting
Capital Markets Research in Accounting
Capital Markets Research in Accounting
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.
$
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
1.2. Summary
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
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
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).
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
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
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
finance and economics. Watts and Zimmerman then tailored those theories to
explain accounting phenomena.
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
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.
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.
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.
each other. The next four subsections consider the above four areas of
research.
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.
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
Fig. 1.
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
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;
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
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.
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
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
4.1.2.1. 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
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
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
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
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.
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
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.
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
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
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
(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.
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.
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.
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
(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.
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.
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
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.
(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.
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.
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
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
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
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
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
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
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