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Credibility of Mandatory Disclosure by Credit Rating Agencies and Market Feedback

Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analysis 2026
Abstract Using the Credit Rating Agency Reform Act of 2006, we examine the effect of the credibility of mandatory disclosure by credit rating agencies (CRAs) on market feedback. We find an increase in investment-price sensitivity for firms affected by the act, and the increase is enhanced when managers have greater incentives to glean information from prices—when firms are exposed to multiple dimensions of uncertainty, have higher growth options, face more competition, have less informed managers, or have higher accounting fraud risk. Our findings suggest that the greater credibility of CRA mandatory disclosure improves managerial learning from stock prices.

Nontax Use of Tax Havens: Evidence From Captive Insurance

Contemporary Accounting Research 2026 43(1), 398-431
ABSTRACT Corporate tax avoidance is a recurring focus of policy‐makers, the media, activist groups, and researchers. This focus often centers on multinational enterprises' (MNEs) use of tax havens, with a wide body of research utilizing MNEs' tax haven use as evidence of corporate tax avoidance activities. However, the common assumption that MNEs operate in tax havens only for tax avoidance purposes overlooks the role tax havens play as homes for captive insurance entities, which allow firms to secure “self” insurance coverage but do not provide obvious differential federal tax benefits. When we remove the effect of captives on tax haven–based measures, we observe a roughly threefold increase in the magnitude of tax savings specifically associated with haven noncaptive activity. We document that nonfinancial firms' use of captive insurance occurs in approximately 11% of firm‐years and spans nearly all Fama–French 49 industries. We construct a haven captive use determinants model, with strong discriminatory power and compelling out‐of‐sample corroboration tests, that future research can employ to account for firms' use of haven captives. Our findings underscore the importance of separating captive and noncaptive‐related haven activities.

Market Leaders’ Tax-Motivated Income Shifting and U.S. Domestic Firms’ Investment Efficiency

The Accounting Review 2026
ABSTRACT This paper examines whether U.S. domestic firms’ investment decisions are affected by their expectations of market leaders’ tax-motivated income shifting. Market leaders’ financial reports can help peers evaluate industry conditions and potential investment payoffs, but income shifting obscures the geographic source of profits and reduces the informativeness of these disclosures. Thus, when peers expect that leaders shift income, they face greater uncertainty about the outcomes of their own investments. Consistent with the theory of investment under uncertainty, we find that U.S. domestic firms are less responsive to investment opportunities as expectations of leaders’ shifting increase. This reduced responsiveness is concentrated among firms facing higher investment irreversibility and those whose market leaders provide less transparent geographic disclosures. Our findings identify a novel spillover cost of income shifting and suggest that policies enhancing the transparency of multinational firms’ geographic reporting or constraining income shifting could help improve domestic firms’ investment decisions.