[PDF] Three Essays On Financial Analysts Performance - eBooks Review

Three Essays On Financial Analysts Performance


Three Essays On Financial Analysts Performance
DOWNLOAD

Download Three Essays On Financial Analysts Performance PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get Three Essays On Financial Analysts Performance book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages. If the content not found or just blank you must refresh this page





Three Essays On Financial Analysts Performance


Three Essays On Financial Analysts Performance
DOWNLOAD
Author : Andreea Moraru-Arfire
language : en
Publisher:
Release Date : 2016

Three Essays On Financial Analysts Performance written by Andreea Moraru-Arfire and has been published by this book supported file pdf, txt, epub, kindle and other format this book has been release on 2016 with categories.




Three Essays On Financial Analysts


Three Essays On Financial Analysts
DOWNLOAD
Author : Dong Hyun Son
language : en
Publisher:
Release Date : 2014

Three Essays On Financial Analysts written by Dong Hyun Son and has been published by this book supported file pdf, txt, epub, kindle and other format this book has been release on 2014 with Business analysts categories.




Three Essays On Financial Analysts


Three Essays On Financial Analysts
DOWNLOAD
Author : Li, Xi
language : en
Publisher:
Release Date : 2002

Three Essays On Financial Analysts written by Li, Xi and has been published by this book supported file pdf, txt, epub, kindle and other format this book has been release on 2002 with Investment advisors categories.


The first chapter improves on the three controversies in the previous analyst literature: Sample coverage, risk adjustments, and performance measurement. I show that at the aggregate level, analyst portfolios generate significant abnormal returns. However, this abnormal performance is generated mainly within a narrow event window around the recommendation date, with no significant post-event return drift. Individually, a large number of analysts significantly outperform risk-adjusted benchmarks. In addition, performance improves with the number of recommendations issued, the number of stocks covered, and the size of their brokerage firms. All-American analyst ranking of Institutional Investor cannot predict analyst performance. Moreover, analysts with more reputation capital at stake recommend less risky portfolios and deviate less from the herd. The second chapter examines the performance persistence of financial analysts at the quarterly, semiannual, and annual intervals in both a two-period and a multi-period framework. The results reveal one-period ahead performance persistence for financial analysts' buy recommendations, which is invariant to testing methodologies, portfolio weighting schemes, return measurement intervals, and risk adjustments. The results also suggest that this performance persistence is more pronounced for raw returns than for risk-adjusted returns and is largely attributable to past winners rather than losers. The third chapter investigates the relation between three important career concerns of financial analysts and their investment recommendation performance. It provides an understanding of different career concerns and evidence relevant to the current policy debate on reforming analyst compensation structure to reduce bias. I find that reputation and recognition are much more important than performance and efforts for Institutional Investor all-star ranking. In contrast, performance and efforts are the most important for Wall Street Journal all-star ranking. Reputation and recognition only have effects for Wall Street Journal non-all-stars to be elected, and performance is the most important for both non-all-stars and all-stars. Career termination provides some extra incentive for better performance and efforts, although it also depends on reputation and recognition.



Three Essays On Financial Analysts


Three Essays On Financial Analysts
DOWNLOAD
Author : Li, Xi
language : en
Publisher:
Release Date : 2002

Three Essays On Financial Analysts written by Li, Xi and has been published by this book supported file pdf, txt, epub, kindle and other format this book has been release on 2002 with Investment advisors categories.




Three Essays In Financial Analysts And Corporate Disclosure Using Textual Analysis


Three Essays In Financial Analysts And Corporate Disclosure Using Textual Analysis
DOWNLOAD
Author : Zhu Chen
language : en
Publisher:
Release Date : 2021

Three Essays In Financial Analysts And Corporate Disclosure Using Textual Analysis written by Zhu Chen and has been published by this book supported file pdf, txt, epub, kindle and other format this book has been release on 2021 with categories.


"The dissertation consists of two essays in financial analysts and one essay in corporate disclosure, all utilizing textual analysis. In the first essay, I decompose analysts’ estimates of weighted average cost of capital (WACC) into abnormal and expected components using a risk characteristic-based model. I find that the abnormal component predicts future stock returns, especially when combined with EPS and dispersion of EPS forecasts. Additional analysis shows that the abnormal component of WACC predicts underlying firms’ future fundamental performance, particularly for experienced analysts and firms with low information intensity. My findings highlight that the abnormal component of analysts’ WACC estimates is informative. Analysts’ decision process to map their forecast inputs such as EPS forecasts and risk assessment to their investment opinions such as target price and recommendation remains to be a black box in the previous literature. In the second essay, I find that analysts’ estimate of WACC is negatively associated with their target price forecasts. It provides empirical evidence that analysts would rationalize the DCF model. From the investor’s perspective, I find that investors generally overreact to the information in WACC estimates when evaluating analysts’ target price forecasts. The extent of the overreaction depends on whether target price changes are conflicted by WACC changes. In light of psychological theories, I provide empirical evidence that when the investors' optimistic verifiable expectation is rejected, they switch to the unverifiable component - WACC for information. At last, I show similar empirical evidence for analyst recommendation.In the third essay, using 4,262 Form 20-F filings from 37 countries, we find that corporate risk-taking is positively associated with managerial expectation as measured by forward-looking statement (FLS) tone, particularly for firms from countries with strong institutions and for FLS tone related to macroeconomics. Our study advances the measure of overall managerial expectations and links it to corporate risk-taking in an international setting"--



Three Essays On Financial Analysts Stock Price Forecasts


Three Essays On Financial Analysts Stock Price Forecasts
DOWNLOAD
Author : Quoc Tuan Quoc Ho
language : en
Publisher:
Release Date : 2013

Three Essays On Financial Analysts Stock Price Forecasts written by Quoc Tuan Quoc Ho and has been published by this book supported file pdf, txt, epub, kindle and other format this book has been release on 2013 with categories.


In this thesis, I study three aspects of sell-side analysts' stock price forecasts, henceforth target prices: analyst teams' target price forecast characteristics, analysts' use of information to revise target prices, and determinants of target price disagreement between analysts. The first essay studies the target price forecast performance of team analysts in the UK and finds that teams issue timelier but not less accurate target prices. Unlike evidence from previous studies, my findings suggest that analyst teamwork may improve forecast timeliness without sacrificing forecast accuracy. However, market reactions to team target price revisions are not significantly different from those to individual analyst target price revisions, suggesting that although target prices issued by analyst teams are timelier and not less accurate than those of individual analysts, investors do not consider analyst team target prices more informative. I conjecture that analysts may work in teams to meet the demand to cover more companies while maintaining the quality of research by individual team members rather than to issue more informative reports. In the second essay, I study how analysts revise their target prices in response to new information implicit in recent market returns, stock excess returns and other analysts' target price revisions. The results suggest that analysts' target price revisions are significantly influenced by market returns, stock excess return and other analysts' target price revisions. I also find that the correlation between target price revisions and stock excess returns is significantly higher when the news implicit in these returns is bad rather than good. I conjecture that analysts discover more bad news from the information in stock excess returns because firms tend to withhold bad news, disclosing it only when it becomes inevitable, while they disclose good news early. Using a new measure of bad to good news concentration, I show that the asymmetric responsiveness of target price revisions to positive and negative stock excess returns is significant for firms with the highest concentration of bad news but is insignificant for firms with the lowest concentration of bad news. I argue that firms with the highest concentration of bad news are more likely to withhold and accumulate bad news. The findings, therefore, support my hypothesis that analysts discover more bad news than good news from stock returns because firms tend to withhold bad news, disclosing it only when it is inevitable. The third essay examines the determinants of analyst target price disagreement. I find that while disagreement in short-term earnings and in long-term earnings growth forecasts are significant determinants, recent 12-month idiosyncratic return volatility has the strongest explanatory power for target price disagreement. The findings suggest that target price disagreement is driven not only by analyst disagreement about short-term earnings and long-term earnings growth, but also by differences in analysts' opinions about the impact of recent firm-specific events on value drivers beyond short-term future earnings and long-term growth, which are eventually reflected in past idiosyncratic return volatility.



Three Essays On The Monitoring Role Of Financial Analysts


Three Essays On The Monitoring Role Of Financial Analysts
DOWNLOAD
Author : Zhongwei Huang
language : en
Publisher:
Release Date : 2015

Three Essays On The Monitoring Role Of Financial Analysts written by Zhongwei Huang and has been published by this book supported file pdf, txt, epub, kindle and other format this book has been release on 2015 with categories.


This dissertation consists of three chapters that present three standalone essays on the monitoring role of financial analysts. Chapter 1 investigates the monitoring role of financial analysts in the financial reporting process by examining the informativeness and monitoring effect of their written comments on earnings quality. I find that these comments have incremental predictability with respect to future accounting restatements, and convey information to investors beyond that in the earnings forecasts, stock ratings, price targets, and other qualitative text in analyst reports. Further analyses suggest that the market's reaction to these comments is primarily driven by negative comments and comments written with certainty. In addition, controlling for accrual reversals, I find that firms significantly reduce the level of accruals-based earnings management after receiving negative comments, and this reduction is not accompanied by an increase in real activities management. Overall, the first chapter provides direct evidence on analysts' monitoring role in financial reporting. Chapter 2 examines whether and how analysts' monitoring of the financial reporting process alleviates a well-known agency problem in which a manager inflates her compensation by manipulating earnings. I argue that analysts' monitoring reduces a manager's ability to conceal earnings management from directors, thus facilitating directors' adjustment of executive compensation in the presence of earnings management. Consistent with this argument, I find that earnings carry a lower weight in the determination of CEO compensation in firms that are criticized by analysts regarding earnings quality, but only when directors are likely to be aware of the critical analyst reports. The main findings are robust to matching on performance and controlling for firm-fixed effects and are not driven by other text in the analyst reports. Additional analyses suggest that the weight placed on earnings decreases as the actual accruals deviate from analysts' accruals forecasts. Overall, the second chapter emphasizes analysts' monitoring role in alleviating managerial rent extraction in executive compensation. Chapter 3 provides evidence on the impact of recent analyst independence reforms (the National Association of Securities Dealers [NASD] Rule 2711 and the companion New York Stock Exchange [NYSE] Rule 472 Amendment, and the Global Settlement) on analysts' monitoring role in the financial reporting process. The NASD Rule 2711 requires brokerage firms to structurally separate investment banking from equity research; meanwhile, the Global Settlement mandates the participating banks to fund independent research firms to the amount of 432.5 million dollars from 2004 to 2009. I find evidence consistent with an increase in analysts' monitoring effectiveness following the reforms. Further analyses suggest that this increase is primarily driven by the Global Settlement, rather than by the adoption of NASD Rule 2711. The evidence is robust to a difference-in-difference specification with Canadian firms as the control group. Moreover, I document a reversal of the increase in monitoring effectiveness following the end of the Global Settlement's five-year funding. Overall, the third chapter highlights the interaction between the monitoring role of financial analysts and the regulatory environment.



Three Essays In Corporate Finance


Three Essays In Corporate Finance
DOWNLOAD
Author : Binay Kumar Adhikari
language : en
Publisher:
Release Date : 2015

Three Essays In Corporate Finance written by Binay Kumar Adhikari and has been published by this book supported file pdf, txt, epub, kindle and other format this book has been release on 2015 with Electronic dissertations categories.


This dissertation consists of three essays in corporate finance. There are five chapters. In the first essay, we find that local gambling preferences have economically meaningful effects on corporate innovation. Using a county's Catholics-to-Protestants ratio as a proxy for local gambling preferences, we show that firms headquartered in areas with greater tolerance for gambling tend to be more innovative, i.e. they spend more on R & D, and obtain more and better quality patents. These results are supported by several robustness checks, tests to mitigate identification concerns, and analyses of several secondary implications. Investment in innovation makes a stock more lottery-like, a feature desired by individuals with a taste for gambling. Gambling preferences of both local investors and managers appear to influence firms' innovative endeavors and facilitate transforming their industry growth opportunities into firm value. In the second essay, we find robust evidence that banks headquartered in more religious areas take less risk and remain less vulnerable to financial crises. To reduce risk, these banks grow their assets more slowly, hold safer assets, rely less on non-traditional banking, and provide less incentives to their executives to increase risks. Local religiosity has a more pronounced influence on risks among banks for which local investors and managers are more important. But these banks command lower market valuations during normal times. Overall, this paper provides the first empirical evidence of the importance of human behavior in bank risk-taking. In the third essay, I examine the influence of sell-side financial analysts on corporate social responsibility (CSR), and find that firms with greater analyst coverage tend to be less socially responsible. To establish causality, I employ a difference-in-differences (DiD) technique, using brokerage closures and mergers as exogenous shocks to analyst coverage, as well as an instrumental variables approach. Both identification strategies suggest that analyst coverage has a negative causal effect on CSR. My findings are consistent with the view that spending on CSR is a manifestation of agency problem, and that financial analysts exert pressure on managers to cut back such discretionary spending.



Three Essays On Empirical Finance


Three Essays On Empirical Finance
DOWNLOAD
Author : Tse-Chun Lin
language : en
Publisher: Rozenberg Publishers
Release Date : 2009

Three Essays On Empirical Finance written by Tse-Chun Lin and has been published by Rozenberg Publishers this book supported file pdf, txt, epub, kindle and other format this book has been release on 2009 with categories.




Three Essays On Corporate Finance And Financial Institutions


Three Essays On Corporate Finance And Financial Institutions
DOWNLOAD
Author : Yan Wang
language : en
Publisher:
Release Date : 2014

Three Essays On Corporate Finance And Financial Institutions written by Yan Wang and has been published by this book supported file pdf, txt, epub, kindle and other format this book has been release on 2014 with categories.


"This dissertation consists of three essays. The first essay provides a systematic way to distinguish informed institutional trades from uninformed ones based on the relation between institutional trades and sequential public information. By studying actively managed U.S. institutions from 1994 to 2010, I show that institutional trades initiated by managers responding proactively to upcoming informational signals strongly predict future stock returns. A hedging portfolio based on these trades generates an average risk-adjusted abnormal return of approximately 3% per quarter. The predictability is more pronounced for stocks with higher information asymmetry, such as those of firms with high volatility and young age. I also find that the most informed institutional traders are likely to have short-term investment horizon, large block holdings, high industry portfolio concentrations, as well as reside in financial centers. My results indicate that the informedness of certain institutional investor groups is substantially reduced after Regulation FD. The second essay examines the product market impact of minority stake acquisitions. We show that partial equity ownership between rival firms has a significant impact on industry competition. Industry-level tests indicate that acquisitions of a minority stake in competing firms' equity are followed by higher output prices and higher price-cost margins, particularly in industries with high barriers to entry. Stock-price reactions of non-participating competitors of the acquirer and target are positive while announcement returns of customer firms are negative. Moreover, the positive (negative) stock-price reaction of competitors (customers) is more pronounced when the acquirer and target are larger firms with greater market share. These results indicate that equity ownership of rival firms dampens competition in an industry.The third essay examines whether foreign firms by listing on or delisting from regular U.S. stock exchanges affect their U.S. counterparts. We find that they do - negatively for listings and positively for delistings, - and the impact is especially profound for the listing events. The U.S. counterparts of foreign firms belonging to the same industry experience severe underperformance in the short- and long-run across a variety of financial and accounting performance metrics, such as firm returns as well as growth in sales, profits, total assets, and capital expenditures. For example, the average 60-day cumulative abnormal return of U.S. firms around the foreign listing date is negative 2%, while the 36-month post-listing return is negative 4.3%. This result is present among listings with and without U.S. equity issuance. In addition, incumbent U.S. firms experience changes in their financing policies and a reduction in analyst coverage following listings of competing foreign firms in the U.S. Our findings therefore highlight an important role of international markets in influencing U.S. firms and markets. " --