The Role of Gender in the Aggressive Questioning of CEOs During Earnings Conference Calls

被引:10
|
作者
Comprix, Joseph [1 ]
Lopatta, Kerstin [2 ]
Tideman, Sebastian A. [3 ]
机构
[1] Syracuse Univ, Whitman Sch Management, Lubin Sch Management, Syracuse, NY 13244 USA
[2] Univ Hamburg, Dept Socioecon, Hamburg, Germany
[3] Univ Exeter, Sch Business, Dept Finance & Accounting, Exeter, Devon, England
来源
ACCOUNTING REVIEW | 2022年 / 97卷 / 07期
关键词
earnings conference calls; gender; gender differences; question style; verbal aggressiveness; BUY-SIDE ANALYSTS; SELF-SELECTION; CFO GENDER; WOMEN; PERFORMANCE; PRESIDENTS; MANAGEMENT; SPEAKING; LANGUAGE; POWER;
D O I
10.2308/TAR-2019-1029
中图分类号
F8 [财政、金融];
学科分类号
0202 ;
摘要
We investigate the role of gender on the aggressiveness of sell-side analysts' questions during earnings conference calls. Our tests reveal that the verbal aggressiveness of analysts' questions is significantly associated with both the gender of the analyst asking the question and the gender of the CEO fielding the question. First, we find that male analysts are more verbally aggressive than female analysts. Specifically, male analysts' questions are more direct and more likely to be followed with further questions, to have a preface statement, and to be negative, all of which are consistent with verbal aggressiveness. Second, male analysts' questions to female CEOs are more aggressive than their questions to male CEOs. Gender-based verbal aggressiveness appears to be associated with analysts' career trajectories: female analysts who ask aggressive questions have a higher likelihood of becoming ''star'' analysts, whereas we fail to find such evidence for male analysts.
引用
收藏
页码:79 / 107
页数:29
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Climate change and corporate culture of innovation: evidence from earnings conference calls
    Ongsakul, Viput
    Chintrakarn, Pandej
    Jiraporn, Pornsit
    Chatjuthamard, Pattanaporn
    PACIFIC ACCOUNTING REVIEW, 2024, 36 (01) : 161 - 181
  • [42] Gender Role Ideology and the Gender Based Differences in Earnings
    Juanita M. Firestone
    Richard J. Harris
    Linda C. Lambert
    Journal of Family and Economic Issues, 1999, 20 (2) : 191 - 215
  • [43] Climate change, asset redeployability, and sustainability: evidence from earnings conference calls
    Ongsakul, Viput
    Chintrakarn, Pandej
    Jiraporn, Pornsit
    JOURNAL OF SUSTAINABLE FINANCE & INVESTMENT, 2024,
  • [44] Evaluation in English earnings conference calls: a corpus-assisted contrastive study
    Pang, Jixian
    Chen, Fang
    TEXT & TALK, 2018, 38 (04) : 411 - 433
  • [45] Tone complexity and analyst forecast behaviors: evidence from earnings conference calls
    Kwon, Kyungeun
    Zhou, Mi
    Wang, Tawei
    Cheng, Xu
    Qiao, Zhilei
    ASIAN REVIEW OF ACCOUNTING, 2024, 32 (03) : 491 - 520
  • [46] Non-Answers During Conference Calls
    Gow, Ian D.
    Larcker, David F.
    Zakolyukina, Anastasia A.
    JOURNAL OF ACCOUNTING RESEARCH, 2021, 59 (04) : 1349 - 1384
  • [47] Do buy-side analysts in earnings conference calls manipulate stock prices?
    Hu, Gang
    Jung, Michael J.
    Wong, M. H. Franco
    Yu, Danlei Bonnie
    Zhang, X. Frank
    JOURNAL OF CORPORATE FINANCE, 2024, 89
  • [48] Linguistic attributes and trade credit: Evidence from textual analysis of earnings conference calls
    Fei, Xingyuan
    Xu, Hongkang
    Zhang, Jiarui
    JOURNAL OF CORPORATE ACCOUNTING AND FINANCE, 2023, 34 (01): : 119 - 136
  • [49] Corporate culture, cultural diversification, and independent directors: Evidence from earnings conference calls
    Chindasombatcharoen, Pongsapak
    Chatjuthamard, Pattanaporn
    Jiraporn, Pornsit
    JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL AND EXPERIMENTAL FINANCE, 2023, 37
  • [50] Relative Emphasis on Non-GAAP Earnings in Conference Calls: Determinants and Market Reaction
    Henry, Elaine
    Hu, Nan
    Jiang, Xi
    EUROPEAN ACCOUNTING REVIEW, 2020, 29 (01) : 169 - 197