Shocks to Shocks: A Theoretical Foundation for the Information Content of Earnings

被引:18
|
作者
Callen, Jeffrey L. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 1A1, Canada
关键词
Ball-Brown; Earnings; Information content; Variance decomposition; TIME-SERIES PROPERTIES; VARIANCE DECOMPOSITION ANALYSIS; ACCOUNTING-BASED VALUATION; LEVEL STOCK RETURNS; CASH FLOWS; REGRESSION-COEFFICIENTS; INVESTOR SOPHISTICATION; INTEREST-RATES; 10-Q FILINGS; INCOME;
D O I
10.1506/car.26.1.5
中图分类号
F8 [财政、金融];
学科分类号
0202 ;
摘要
This study maintains that the value-relevance of accounting information cannot be measured solely by reference to Ball-Brown earnings response coefficient (ERC) analysis. The contribution of accounting information to return volatility is equally crucial. Synthesizing and generalizing results from earlier studies, this paper rigorously develops Ball-Brown and volatility measures of the information content of earnings from underlying primitives using Vuolteenaho's 2002 accounting return decomposition model. The well-known Ball-Brown metric is obtained by assuming that (a) the time series of (log-deflated) earnings is stationary AR(l), (b) "other information" shocks are nonexistent, and (c) expected future discount rates are intertemporally constant. This measure is initially extended to include "other information" shocks and dynamic discount rates that are also stationary AR(l). Generalized Ball-Brown and variance measures of information content are further obtained where the time series of earnings, "other information", and expected future discount rates follow either loglinear stationary ARMA(p, q) processes or a loglinear stationary VAR process. Closed-form solutions of information content are also obtained for earnings components (e.g., cash flows and accruals). Applications of the theory are offered that show how this framework improves on extant empirical methodologies and suggests further lines of research.
引用
收藏
页码:135 / +
页数:33
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] MONETARY POLICY SHOCKS, EXPECTATIONS, AND INFORMATION RIGIDITIES
    Beckmann, Joscha
    Czudaj, Robert L.
    ECONOMIC INQUIRY, 2018, 56 (04) : 2158 - 2176
  • [42] OPEN INTEREST, CROSS LISTING, AND INFORMATION SHOCKS
    Aguenaou, Samir
    Ap Gwilym, Owain
    Rhodes, Mark
    JOURNAL OF FUTURES MARKETS, 2011, 31 (08) : 755 - 778
  • [43] Spillover effects of monetary policy and information shocks
    Hou, Ai Jun
    Khrashchevskyi, Ian
    Suardi, Sandy
    Xu, Caihong
    FINANCE RESEARCH LETTERS, 2024, 62
  • [44] Transition of slow shocks to fast shocks
    Whang, YC
    SOLAR WIND EIGHT - PROCEEDINGS OF THE EIGHTH INTERNATIONAL SOLAR WIND CONFERENCE, 1996, (382): : 562 - 565
  • [45] Are shocks to the terms of trade shocks to productivity?
    Kehoe, Timothy J.
    Ruhl, Kim J.
    REVIEW OF ECONOMIC DYNAMICS, 2008, 11 (04) : 804 - 819
  • [46] Information shocks and the cross section of expected returns
    Savaser, Tanseli
    Tinic, Murat
    BORSA ISTANBUL REVIEW, 2023, 23 (02) : 378 - 401
  • [47] Disaggregated approach to government spending shocks: a theoretical analysis
    Cortuk, Orcan
    Guler, Mustafa Haluk
    JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC POLICY REFORM, 2015, 18 (04) : 267 - 292
  • [48] THEORETICAL ANALYSIS OF PROPAGATION OF SOUND WAVES CONTAINING SHOCKS
    BLACKSTOCK, DT
    JOURNAL OF THE ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 1964, 36 (05): : 1032 - &
  • [49] 'SHOCKS'
    MOURE, E
    CANADIAN LITERATURE, 1984, (100): : 234 - 235
  • [50] 'Shocks'
    Hoffman, D
    HUDSON REVIEW, 2005, 58 (02): : 231 - 236