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We investigate the role of accrual accounting in the asymmetrically timely recognition (incorporation in reported earnings) of gains and losses. Timely recognition requires accruals when it precedes complete realization of the gains and losses in cash. We show that nonlinear accruals models...
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<heading id="h1" level="1" implicit="yes" format="display">ABSTRACT</heading>We quantify the relative importance of earnings announcements in providing new information to the share market, using the "R"-super-2 in a regression of securities' calendar-year returns on their four quarterly earnings-announcement "window" returns. The "R"-super-2, which averages...
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We examine whether financial analysts fully incorporate expected inflation in their earnings forecasts for individual stocks. We find that expected inflation proxies, such as lagged inflation and inflation forecasts from the Michigan Survey of Consumers, predict the future earnings change of a...
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This paper examines the cross-sectional implications of the inflation illusion hypothesis for the post-earnings-announcement drift. The inflation illusion hypothesis suggests that stock market investors fail to incorporate inflation in forecasting future earnings growth rates, and this causes...
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10005193874