Abstract
The disclosure of corporate forecasts of projected annual earnings was a topic of intensive debate within the investment community during the years 1970-75. Questions of accuracy, objectivity, independent certification, and investment utility were examined from a number of theoretic and pragmatic viewpoints.' Most of these inquiries appear to assume that an investor's beliefs and/or actions may be affected by the disclosure of a management forecast, and several explore the possible rewards and sanctions that a firm may experience as a result of forecast accuracy. The purpose of this study is to test the hypothesized information content of management forecasts through the examination of the common stock price behavior which accompanied the voluntary disclosure of 336 forecasts of annual earnings per share during the years 1963-67. The results reported here indicate that these forecast disclosures were accompanied by significant price adjustments, from which the inference may be drawn that either the data presented in a management forecast, the act of voluntary disclosure, or both, convey information to investors.
Keywords
Related Publications
Voluntary Disclosure of Profit Forecasts by Target Companies in Takeover Bids
This paper examines factors influencing voluntary forecast disclosure by target companies, whether good/bad news forecasts are disclosed and the influence of forecasts on the ou...
On the Association between Voluntary Disclosure and Earnings Management
This study investigates whether managers who issue annual earnings forecasts manage reported earnings toward their forecasts, fearing legal actions by investors and loss of repu...
Corporate Managers' Earnings Forecasts and Symmetrical Adjustments of Market Expectations
Studies of earnings forecasts by corporate managers have focused on various issues. Early studies were concerned with the accuracy of such forecasts (e.g., Copeland and Marioni ...
Analyst Forecasting Errors: Additional Evidence
Analyst forecasting errors are approximately as large as Dreman and Berry (1995) documented, and an optimistic bias is evident for all years from 1985 through 1996. In contrast ...
An Investigation of the Information Content of (Certain) Social Responsibility Disclosures
This study addresses the relevance of certain social responsibility disclosures of firms to investors by empirically assessing their impact on security returns. The results of t...
Publication Info
- Year
- 1976
- Type
- article
- Volume
- 14
- Issue
- 2
- Pages
- 246-246
- Citations
- 1748
- Access
- Closed
External Links
Social Impact
Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions
Citation Metrics
Cite This
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.2307/2490543