The Accounting Review : vol. 77, No. 2, 2002.

Main Author: Matsumato
Format: Book
Subjects:
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100 0 0 |a Matsumato  
245 0 4 |a The Accounting Review :   |b vol. 77, No. 2, 2002. 
300 |a 26cm. 
500 0 0 |a Recent reports in the business press allege that managers take actions to avoid negative earnings surprises. I hypothesize that certain firm characteristics are associated with greater incentives to avoid negative surprises. I find that firms with higher transient institutional ownership, greater reliance on implicit claims with their stakeholders, and higher value-relevance of earnings are more likely to meet or exceed expectations at the earnings announcement. I also examine whether firms manage earnings upward or guide analysts' forecasts downward to avoid missing expectations at the earnings announcement. I examine the relation between firm characteristics and the probability (conditional on meeting analysts' expectations) of having (1) positive abnormal accruals, and (2) forecasts that are lower than expected (using a model of prior earnings changes). Overall, the results suggest that both mechanisms play a role in avoiding negative earnings surprises.  
650 0 0 |a Journal