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Nonstationary expected returns

Journal of Financial Economics 1989 25(1), 51-74
Recent evidence reveals significant negative serial correlation in aggregate (market-wide) stock returns. We extend this result to relative (market-adjusted) returns, demonstrating negative serial correlation in five-year returns. We then test two competing explanations: (1) market mispricing and (2) changing expected returns in an efficient market. The tests are conducted using the capital asset pricing model to estimate relative returns. The evidence suggests that negative serial correlation in relative returns is due almost entirely to variation in relative risks, and therefore expected relative returns, through time. We document substantial relative risk shifts, particularly for extreme-performing stocks.

The effect of international institutional factors on properties of accounting earnings

Journal of Accounting and Economics 2000 29(1), 1-51
International differences in the demand for accounting income predictably affect the way it incorporates economic income (change in market value) over time. We characterize the `shareholder’ and `stakeholder’ corporate governance models of common and code law countries respectively as resolving information asymmetry by public disclosure and private communication. Also, code law directly links accounting income to current payouts (to employees, managers, shareholders and governments). Consequently, code law accounting income is less timely, particularly in incorporating economic losses. Regulation, taxation and litigation cause variation among common law countries. The results have implications for security analysts, standard-setters, regulators, and corporate governance.

Economic Determinants of the Relation between Earnings Changes and Stock Returns

The Accounting Review 1993 68(3), 622-638
[In competitive product markets, product prices and thus firms' revenues incorporate the cost of equity capital. In a competitive capital market, the cost of equity capital (the expected return on equity) increases with the risk of firms' investments. Because accounting earnings are calculated without deducting the cost of equity capital, they are expected to be an increasing function of firms' investment risks. This simple competitive equilibrium analysis predicts a positive relation between changes in investment risk and expected earnings. The presence of corporate debt complicates the analysis because leverage effects seem likely to affect the relation between changes in investment risk and expected earnings. Using annual earnings and return data from 1950 to 1988, we document a statistically significant positive association between changes in equities' relative risks and in earnings. However, on average, only a small proportion of changes in earnings can be attributed to changes in risk. A much larger proportion is attributable to changes in economic rents (windfall gains and losses). The observed positive association between changes in earnings and changes in equities' risks suggests that leverage effects do not fully offset the effect of changes in investment risks. This association is robust with respect to subperiod analysis, alternative specifications of the earnings change variable, alternative data-availability requirements, and the number of portfolios formed.]

The Inflationary Mechanism in the U.K. Economy

American Economic Review 2016
Perhaps one might be forgiven for supposing that, after thirty years of continuing inflation in the United Kingdom, a clear consensus would have emerged among economists, politicians, and men of business as to the causes of that inflation and the steps necessary for its cure. Unfortunately, this is not the case, although the disagreements are often exaggerated for political purposes and the arguments polarized in the sharpness of academic debate. The latest trend in the United Kingdom is to divide the participants into Keynesians and to do battle like mediaeval knights jousting at the tournament. The explanation of prevailing disagreements is in itself complex. It is partly ascribable to the usual difficulties of adequately testing alternative hypotheses against limited sets of time-series data when it is not always possible to reject particular hypotheses against the statistical facts. It must also be said that differences arise that are not so much closely allied to analytical arguments, but which reflect the taste or persuasion of individuals with regard to prescriptions for policy. It is not unknown for positions to be rationalized by subsequent analysis rather than the logical development proceeding in the opposite direction.' In this paper, we argue that the inflationary process in the U.K. economy cannot be simply fitted into either a so-called monetary or a Keynesian framework. The process is a more complicated one that cannot be described simply in terms of the behavior of the money supply on the one hand or the behavior of organized labor on the other. In agreement with the monetarists, it is important to differentiate between the inflationary process under fixed and floating exchange rate regimes, while in opposition to them, we assign a more important role to price and wage inflexibilities in the analysis of imported inflation and the process of adjustment to monetary change.

Earnings quality at initial public offerings

Journal of Accounting and Economics 2008 45(2-3), 324-349
We show that, contrary to popular belief, initial public offering (IPO) firms report more conservatively. We attribute this to the higher quality reporting demanded of public firms by financial statement users and consequentially higher monitoring by auditors, boards, analysts, rating agencies, press, and litigants, and to greater regulatory scrutiny [Ball, R., Shivakumar, L., 2005. Earnings quality in UK private firms: comparative loss recognition timeliness. Journal of Accounting and Economics 39, 83–128]. We also question the evidence of Teoh et al. [1998b. Earnings management and the subsequent market performance of initial public offerings. Journal of Finance 53, 1935–1974] supporting the alternative hypothesis that managers opportunistically inflate earnings to influence IPO pricing. We conjecture that upward-biased estimates of “discretionary” accruals occur in a broad genre of studies on earnings management around similar large transactions and events.

Earnings quality in UK private firms: comparative loss recognition timeliness

Journal of Accounting and Economics 2005 39(1), 83-128
UK private and public companies face substantially equivalent regulation on auditing, accounting standards and taxes. We hypothesize that private company financial reporting nevertheless is of lower quality due to different market demand, regulation notwithstanding. A large UK sample supports this hypothesis. Quality is operationalized using Basu's (1997) time-series measure of timely loss recognition and a new accruals-based method. The result is not affected by controls for size, leverage, industry membership and auditor size, or by allowing endogenous listing choice. The result enhances understanding of private companies, which are predominant in the economy. It also provides insight into the economics of accounting standards.

How naive is the stock market's use of earnings information?

Journal of Accounting and Economics 1996 21(3), 319-337 open access
Rendleman, Jones, and Latané (1987) and Bernard and Thomas (1990) hypothesize and report evidence that investors use a ‘naive’ seasonal random walk model, at least in part, for quarterly earnings. We show that the market acts as if it: (1) does not use a simple seasonal random walk model; (2) does exploit serial correlation at lags 1–4 in seasonally-differenced quarterly earnings; (3) does use the correct signs in exploiting serial correlation at each lag; but (4) underestimates the magnitude of serial correlation by approximately 50% on average. We discuss the consistency of alternative hypotheses with our evidence.