Analyst Herding, Shareholder Investment Horizon, and Management Earnings Guidance

This dissertation examines the characterization of transient investors by financial analysts. Transient investors have been portrayed in the literature as either 1) informed investors or 2) poor monitors. No research to date, however, has examined how financial analysts, who are important informat...

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Main Author: White, Todd Palmer
Other Authors: Accounting and Information Systems
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/37618
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04132012-121410/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-376182020-09-26T05:32:32Z Analyst Herding, Shareholder Investment Horizon, and Management Earnings Guidance White, Todd Palmer Accounting and Information Systems Maher, John J. Brown, Robert M. Barkhi, Reza Oler, Mitchell J. Ince, Ozgur S. Earnings Guidance Short-Term Horizon Transient Investors Herding Financial Analysts This dissertation examines the characterization of transient investors by financial analysts. Transient investors have been portrayed in the literature as either 1) informed investors or 2) poor monitors. No research to date, however, has examined how financial analysts, who are important information intermediaries, characterize transient investors. A view of transient investors through the lens of a financial analyst is obtained through examining how the presence of transient owners in a firm affects financial analystsâ decision making. Specifically, this study examines how transient ownership affects both the propensity of analysts to herd when issuing earnings forecasts for a given firm as well as the incidence with which analysts revise their forecasts when the firm issues earnings guidance. Empirical tests show that financial analysts exhibit a greater propensity to herd when there are transient investors present. The proposed reason for this effect is analysts are herding due to reputational concerns. Further testing, however, does not show that the relation between transient ownership and analyst herding is owed to poor monitoring behavior of transient-owned firms. In contrast, evidence is consistent with the hypothesis that the firm information environment of transient-owned firms is an important cause of analyst herding. In summary, evidence is consistent with the informed investor portrayal of transient investors and there is no evidence indicating financial analysts view transient owners as poor monitors. Finally, when the decision of analysts to issue revised forecasts is examined, it is found that having a higher percentage of the firm owned by dedicated or long-term investors increased the propensity of analysts to issue a revised forecast. Thus, while my analysis is inconsistent with a poor monitoring portrayal of transient investors, results suggest that a dedicated investor base can enhance the perceived credibility of firm disclosures. â Ph. D. 2014-03-14T21:10:29Z 2014-03-14T21:10:29Z 2012-04-04 2012-04-13 2012-04-24 2012-04-24 Dissertation etd-04132012-121410 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/37618 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04132012-121410/ White_TP_D_2012.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Earnings Guidance
Short-Term Horizon
Transient Investors
Herding
Financial Analysts
spellingShingle Earnings Guidance
Short-Term Horizon
Transient Investors
Herding
Financial Analysts
White, Todd Palmer
Analyst Herding, Shareholder Investment Horizon, and Management Earnings Guidance
description This dissertation examines the characterization of transient investors by financial analysts. Transient investors have been portrayed in the literature as either 1) informed investors or 2) poor monitors. No research to date, however, has examined how financial analysts, who are important information intermediaries, characterize transient investors. A view of transient investors through the lens of a financial analyst is obtained through examining how the presence of transient owners in a firm affects financial analystsâ decision making. Specifically, this study examines how transient ownership affects both the propensity of analysts to herd when issuing earnings forecasts for a given firm as well as the incidence with which analysts revise their forecasts when the firm issues earnings guidance. Empirical tests show that financial analysts exhibit a greater propensity to herd when there are transient investors present. The proposed reason for this effect is analysts are herding due to reputational concerns. Further testing, however, does not show that the relation between transient ownership and analyst herding is owed to poor monitoring behavior of transient-owned firms. In contrast, evidence is consistent with the hypothesis that the firm information environment of transient-owned firms is an important cause of analyst herding. In summary, evidence is consistent with the informed investor portrayal of transient investors and there is no evidence indicating financial analysts view transient owners as poor monitors. Finally, when the decision of analysts to issue revised forecasts is examined, it is found that having a higher percentage of the firm owned by dedicated or long-term investors increased the propensity of analysts to issue a revised forecast. Thus, while my analysis is inconsistent with a poor monitoring portrayal of transient investors, results suggest that a dedicated investor base can enhance the perceived credibility of firm disclosures. â === Ph. D.
author2 Accounting and Information Systems
author_facet Accounting and Information Systems
White, Todd Palmer
author White, Todd Palmer
author_sort White, Todd Palmer
title Analyst Herding, Shareholder Investment Horizon, and Management Earnings Guidance
title_short Analyst Herding, Shareholder Investment Horizon, and Management Earnings Guidance
title_full Analyst Herding, Shareholder Investment Horizon, and Management Earnings Guidance
title_fullStr Analyst Herding, Shareholder Investment Horizon, and Management Earnings Guidance
title_full_unstemmed Analyst Herding, Shareholder Investment Horizon, and Management Earnings Guidance
title_sort analyst herding, shareholder investment horizon, and management earnings guidance
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/37618
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-04132012-121410/
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