The effect of information complexity on analysts' use of that information

被引:172
|
作者
Plumlee, MA [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 USA
来源
ACCOUNTING REVIEW | 2003年 / 78卷 / 01期
关键词
information complexity; analysts' forecasts; information use; effective tax rate forecasts;
D O I
10.2308/accr.2003.78.1.275
中图分类号
F8 [财政、金融];
学科分类号
0202 ;
摘要
In this study I investigate the relation between information complexity and financial analysts' use of that information. I rank by complexity six tax-law changes enacted by the Tax Reform Act of 1986, and then examine analysts' explicit forecasts of effective tax rates around those changes. I show that analysts' revisions of their forecasts of effective tax rates appear to impound the effects of the less complex tax-law changes but not the more complex changes. Furthermore, as expected, if analysts assimilate less complex (but not more complex) information, the magnitude of the errors in their forecasts of effective tax rates increases with the effects of the more complex tax-law changes, but is unrelated to the less complex changes. Taken together, these results indicate that analysts assimilate less complex information to a greater extent than they assimilate more complex information. Either analysts' abilities to incorporate specific information into their forecasts is a decreasing function of the complexity of that information, or analysts choose not to assimilate complex information because the cost would exceed the benefit. In either case, complexity reduces analysts' use of information. These results demonstrate the importance of considering information attributes, such as complexity, when investigating why analysts' forecasts fail to incorporate all public information.
引用
收藏
页码:275 / 296
页数:22
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Using analysts' forecasts to measure properties of analysts' information environment
    Barron, OE
    Kim, O
    Lim, SC
    Stevens, DE
    [J]. ACCOUNTING REVIEW, 1998, 73 (04): : 421 - 433
  • [22] Securities analysts as information-seekers
    Baldwin, NS
    Rice, RE
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE ASIS ANNUAL MEETING, 1996, 33 : 146 - 151
  • [23] The summary to the article "an Ontology the of Information Analysts"
    Bekrenev, VA
    [J]. NEFTYANOE KHOZYAISTVO, 2001, (01): : 87 - 89
  • [24] THE INFORMATION CONTENT OF ANALYSTS' RECOMMENDATIONS REVISITED
    Bradley, Daniel
    Clarke, Jonathan
    Lee, Suzanne
    Ornthanalai, Chayawat
    [J]. JOURNAL OF INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT, 2016, 14 (01): : 75 - 86
  • [25] COMPLEXITY AND INFORMATION
    ROSEN, R
    [J]. JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL AND APPLIED MATHEMATICS, 1988, 22 (2-3) : 211 - 218
  • [26] Securities analysts as information-seekers
    Baldwin, NS
    Rice, RE
    [J]. ASIS '96 - PROCEEDINGS OF THE 59TH ASIS ANNUAL MEETING, VOL 33, 1996: GLOBAL COMPLEXITY: INFORMATION, CHAOS AND CONTROL, 1996, 33 : 146 - 151
  • [27] Information, Analysts, and Stock Return Comovement
    Hameed, Allaudeen
    Morck, Randall
    Shen, Jianfeng
    Yeung, Bernard
    [J]. REVIEW OF FINANCIAL STUDIES, 2015, 28 (11): : 3153 - 3187
  • [28] EARNINGS EXPECTATIONS - THE ANALYSTS INFORMATION ADVANTAGE
    KROSS, W
    RO, B
    SCHROEDER, D
    [J]. ACCOUNTING REVIEW, 1990, 65 (02): : 461 - 476
  • [29] Information technologies in the professional activities of analysts
    Denisova, AL
    Gerasimov, BI
    [J]. INDUSTRIAL LABORATORY, 1996, 62 (04): : 207 - 209
  • [30] INSIDE INFORMATION - A GREEN LIGHT FOR ANALYSTS
    不详
    [J]. INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR, 1983, 17 (08): : 94 - 94