Analyst earnings forecasts for publicly traded insurance companies

被引:6
|
作者
Fan D.K.K. [1 ]
So R.W. [1 ]
Yeh J.J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Department of Finance, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, New Territories
关键词
Analyst forecasts; Fair value reporting; Insurance companies;
D O I
10.1007/s11156-006-7212-1
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Several trends in the insurance and financial services industry, including demutualizationconsolidation, and deregulation, have attracted increasing attention from investors and financial analysts. This paper investigates the accuracy of the earnings forecasts of financial analysts for insurance companies. Our empirical results indicate that analyst forecasts outperform random walk time-series forecasts. Furthermore, we find that both disagreement over earnings forecasts among analysts and the relative forecasting error in the mean forecasts is smaller for life insurers than for property-casualty insurers, whereas the relative errors for forecasts for multiple-line insurers are in between the two. Forecasting error is a negative function of firm size and the number of analysts who are following a company, and is a positive function of the disagreement among analysts.Analyst forecasts have a timing advantage over the random walk model. Our results also suggest that the fair value reporting requirement (SFAS 115), which has been in effect since 1994, has enhanced the accuracy of analyst forecasts. The SFAS 115 has improved the superiority of analyst forecasts over the random walk forecasts for life insurers, but not for property-casualty insurers, and there is a weak improvement for multiple-line insurers. © 2006 Springer Science + Business Media, Inc.
引用
收藏
页码:105 / 136
页数:31
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Supply chain information in analyst reports on publicly traded companies
    Son, Byung-Gak
    Sodhi, ManMohan
    Kocabasoglu-Hillmer, Canan
    Lee, Tae-Hee
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PRODUCTION ECONOMICS, 2016, 171 : 350 - 360
  • [2] Analysts' Earnings Estimates for Publicly Traded Food Companies: How Good Are They?
    Manfredo, Mark R.
    Sanders, Dwight R.
    Scott, Winifred D.
    [J]. AGRIBUSINESS, 2011, 27 (03) : 261 - 279
  • [3] The IFRS Assessment by Publicly Traded Companies
    Tuzarova, Simona
    Mejzlik, Ladislav
    [J]. IMPACT OF GLOBALIZATION ON INTERNATIONAL FINANCE AND ACCOUNTING, 2018, : 341 - 346
  • [4] The impairment test of goodwill: an empirical analysis of incentives for earnings management in Italian publicly traded companies
    Korosec, Bojana
    Jerman, Mateja
    Tominc, Polona
    [J]. ECONOMIC RESEARCH-EKONOMSKA ISTRAZIVANJA, 2016, 29 (01): : 162 - 176
  • [5] PREDICTING INDIVIDUAL ANALYST EARNINGS FORECASTS
    STICKEL, SE
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ACCOUNTING RESEARCH, 1990, 28 (02) : 409 - 417
  • [6] Forecasting earnings with combination of analyst forecasts
    Lin, Hai
    Tao, Xinyuan
    Wu, Chunchi
    [J]. JOURNAL OF EMPIRICAL FINANCE, 2022, 68 : 133 - 159
  • [7] Analyst reputation and management earnings forecasts
    Kim, Jae B.
    Kim, Yongtae
    Lee, Joonho
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ACCOUNTING AND PUBLIC POLICY, 2021, 40 (01)
  • [8] Do voluntary positive earnings forecasts of Chinese listed companies benefit publicly or privately?
    Zhang, Jing
    Lu, Guihua
    Liu, Baoliang
    [J]. NANKAI BUSINESS REVIEW INTERNATIONAL, 2018, 9 (01) : 78 - 98
  • [9] Forecasting Insolvency of Brazilian Publicly Traded Companies
    Dos Santos, Atila P.
    Dos Santos, Sandra I. F.
    Do Prado, Hercules A.
    Ferneda, Edilson
    [J]. SMART DIGITAL FUTURES 2014, 2014, 262 : 228 - 236
  • [10] Analyst Coverage and the Likelihood of Meeting or Beating Analyst Earnings Forecasts
    Huang, Shawn X.
    Pereira, Raynolde
    Wang, Changjiang
    [J]. CONTEMPORARY ACCOUNTING RESEARCH, 2017, 34 (02) : 871 - 899