Signaling via Earnings Downgrades: How Reputational Concerns Shape Analyst Responses to Corporate Fraud?

Lerong He, M. Conyon, J. Chen
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This study examines reactions of financial analysts to the disclosure of corporate fraud. We posit that analysts downgrade earnings forecasts of fraud firms after fraud disclosure to signal their quality and integrity. We explore how internal and external contingencies shape analysts’ reputational concerns, influence their motivation to signal via earnings downgrades, and consequently affect their responses to corporate fraud. Using longitudinal data on Chinese publicly traded firms between 2002 and 2013 and employing a difference-in-differences design, this study documents that financial analysts significantly lower their earnings estimates of fraudulent firms after fraud disclosure compared to the control group of non-fraud firms. In addition, post-disclosure earnings downgrades are larger for more experienced analysts, for analysts following firms with stronger analyst coverage, and after the revision of the professional ethics code for analysts. This study provides empirical support to signaling theory. We show that earnings downgrades of fraudulent firms may serve as a signal for financial analysts to indicate their quality and integrity. We document that analysts’ motivation to signal via earnings downgrades is influenced by their reputational concerns, which are moderated by their career experience, peer pressure, professional norm and social expectations.
通过盈利下调发出信号:声誉问题如何影响分析师对公司欺诈的反应?
本研究考察了财务分析师对公司欺诈披露的反应。我们假设分析师在披露欺诈信息后下调欺诈公司的盈利预测,以表明其质量和诚信。我们探讨了内部和外部突发事件如何塑造分析师的声誉担忧,影响他们通过盈利下调来发出信号的动机,从而影响他们对公司欺诈的反应。本研究利用2002年至2013年中国上市公司的纵向数据,并采用差异中的差异设计,证明金融分析师在披露欺诈信息后对欺诈公司的盈利预期显著低于非欺诈公司的对照组。此外,对于经验更丰富的分析师、关注分析师覆盖面更大的公司的分析师,以及分析师职业道德准则修订后的分析师,披露后的收益下调幅度更大。本研究为信号传导理论提供了实证支持。我们表明,对欺诈公司的盈利下调可能作为金融分析师表明其质量和诚信的信号。我们发现,分析师通过下调收益来发出信号的动机受到其声誉担忧的影响,而声誉担忧受到其职业经验、同侪压力、职业规范和社会期望的调节。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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