Do Stock Prices Fully Reflect Information in Current Earnings, Cash Flows Accruals?: Evidence From Quarterly Data

1999 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 161-175 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gil S. Bae
2012 ◽  
Vol 28 (5) ◽  
pp. 1085 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dana Hollie ◽  
Shaokun Carol Yu

While SFAS No. 131 is intended to increase the transparency of financial reporting using a management approach, it may reduce shareholders ability to interpret segment disclosures relative to the industry approach employed under SFAS No.14. This study investigates whether segment reconciliation differences affect stock prices and whether abnormal returns can be earned using information about two components of earnings: aggregated segment earnings and segment earnings reconciliations. We compute reconciliations as the difference between firm-level consolidated earnings and aggregated segment-level earnings. Firms that report negative SERs have greater sales and profitability, greater return on equity, as well as more operating cash flows and firm growth. This suggests that firms that report aggregated segment earnings greater than firm-level consolidated earnings may be better off financially. Our findings show that mispricing does occur when firms report positive SERs by the market, underestimating the segment earnings reconciliation component of earnings persistence. Investors can also earn positive abnormal returns when investors take a long (short) position with the portfolio with the highest (lowest) absolute SERs. On the contrary, we find investors earn negative abnormal returns when firms report negative SERs. Collectively, this study provides evidence that mispricing occurs and that investors over/underestimate the importance and/or persistence of segment earnings reconciliations.


1999 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 451-464 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mary Beth Mohrman

This assignment, which involves accounting for a simple bond refunding, achieves several objectives. First, it reinforces basic concepts in bond accounting, such as cash flows, book values, interest expense and gains/losses from early extinguishment. Second, it leads students to critically analyze an article from the popular business press. Third, it illustrates many important issues in financial accounting, such as earnings management, the relationship between earnings and stock prices, and economic consequences. Students are asked to read “Paper Money” from Forbes' “Numbers Game” column. The article describes General Host's bond exchange offer and questions the recognition of a gain in such circumstances. The case assignment requires students to carefully analyze the bond exchange and to question many of the authors' assumptions about the economic impacts of the exchange offer. I have used this case successfully in undergraduate intermediate accounting classes and in an introductory financial accounting course for M.B.A. students.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
pp. 1-8
Author(s):  
Xin Luo ◽  
Jinlin Zhang

This article proposes a new way to price Chinese convertible bonds by the Longstaff-Schwartz Least Squares Monte Carlo simulation. The default intensity and the volatility are the two important parameters, which are difficultly obtained in the emerging market, in pricing convertible bonds. By developing the Merton theory, we find a new effective method to get the theoretical value of the two parameters. In the pricing method, the default risk is described by the default intensity, and a default on a bond is triggered by the bottom Q(T) (default probability) percentile of the simulated stock prices at the maturity date. In the present simulation, a risk-free interest rate is used to discount the cash flows. So, the new pricing model is considered to tally with the general pricing rule under martingale measure. The empirical results of the CEB and the XIG convertible bonds by the proposed method are compared with those obtained by the credit spreads method. It is also found that the theoretical prices calculated by the method proposed in the article fit the market prices well, especially, in the long run tendency.


2007 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 129-151 ◽  
Author(s):  
Malcolm Baker ◽  
Jeffrey Wurgler

Investor sentiment, defined broadly, is a belief about future cash flows and investment risks that is not justified by the facts at hand. The question is no longer whether investor sentiment affects stock prices, but how to measure investor sentiment and quantify its effects. One approach is “bottom up,” using biases in individual investor psychology, such as overconfidence, representativeness, and conservatism, to explain how individual investors underreact or overreact to past returns or fundamentals The investor sentiment approach that we develop in this paper is, by contrast, distinctly “top down” and macroeconomic: we take the origin of investor sentiment as exogenous and focus on its empirical effects. We show that it is quite possible to measure investor sentiment and that waves of sentiment have clearly discernible, important, and regular effects on individual firms and on the stock market as a whole. The top-down approach builds on the two broader and more irrefutable assumptions of behavioral finance—sentiment and the limits to arbitrage—to explain which stocks are likely to be most affected by sentiment. In particular, stocks that are difficult to arbitrage or to value are most affected by sentiment.


2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (2) ◽  
pp. 171
Author(s):  
Nico Lukito ◽  
Kristian Chandra

<p><em>Many factors influence the fluctuation of stock prices, including: deposit interest rates, stock trading volume, return on equity, earnings per share. The last two factors are part of the financial statements presented by the issuers. The financial statements contain accounting earnings information and cash flow. Therefore it is necessary to examine empirically whether accounting earnings and cash flows have an influence on changes in stock prices. Data is collected from the stock prices of insurance companies that have gone public in the Jakarta Stock Exchange which have a nominal value per share of Rp.1,000.00 (one thousand rupiah) from 2008 to 2012. This study took 10 existing insurance companies to analyze. The basis for this sampling is based on the amount of data available on the Jakarta Stock Exchange Website. From the results of variable analysis of total cash flow and accounting profit variables in the first equation individually can not significantly influence stock prices. And together all the independent variables have no effect simultaneously on stock prices. The value of Squared R is very low, which means that the variable cannot explain stock prices, but can be explained by other variables not included in the research model. Variable operational cash flows, investment cash flows and funding cash flows in the second equation individually can not influence stock prices significantly. And together all the independent variables have no effect simultaneously on stock prices. Also obtained is a very low R Squared value, which means that the variable cannot explain stock prices, but can be explained by other variables not included in the research model</em></p>


AJAR ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (01) ◽  
pp. 21-47
Author(s):  
Muchriana Muchran ◽  
M. Fajrin A. Thaib

This study aims to analyze the effect of cash flow from operating activities, investment activities, funding activities that have an impact on stock prices and analyze the effect of cash flows from operating activities, investment activities, funding activities simultaneously affecting stock prices. Data analysis methods used are quantitative descriptive analysis and multiple regression analysis. Based on the results of a partial test, the effect of cash flow from operating activities on stock prices has a positive and significant effect, thus the first hypothesis is accepted. Based on the results of a partial test between investment cash flow to stock prices, it was found that cash flow from investment activities was not significant, thus the second hypothesis was rejected. Based on the results of a partial test between the cash flows of funding activities against the stock price, it was found that the funding cash flow was not significant. This can be interpreted that the funding cash flow has no effect on stock prices, thus the third hypothesis is rejected. And the results of simultaneous tests prove that there is a simultaneous influence between cash flow operating activities, investment activities and funding activities on stock prices. Thus the fourth hypothesis is accepted.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (5) ◽  
pp. 424
Author(s):  
Tamer Bahjat Sabri ◽  
Khalid Mohammad Hasan Sweis ◽  
Issam Naim Mahammad Ayyash ◽  
Yasmeen Faheem Asaad Qalalwi ◽  
Israa Sami Abbas Abdullah

This study sought to test the relationship between cash flows from operating activities, investment activities and financial activities and on one hand and stock returns and the volume of assets on the companies listed in Palestine Stock Exchange on the other hand. The study incorporated 24 companies in 2018 and the required data were obtained through the financial statements. To test the hypotheses of the study, the Mann-Whitny U Test was used, a nonparametric test. Also the Kolmogorov-Smirnov was done. The findings demonstrated that the value of the Whitny U Test was (-3.291) Z with a statistical significance at 1%. Based on this, the null hypothesis was rejected and the alternative one, stating that there is a statistically significant difference between the operating flows of companies with low assets and those companies with high assets, was accepted. However, the other null hypothesis was accepted. The study recommended that companies and investors should take into consideration cash flows when taking an investment decision in Palestine Stock Exchange.


2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (7) ◽  
pp. 149
Author(s):  
Abdul Aziz Farid Saymeh ◽  
Rashed Mohamad Salameh

The research objective was to identify the determinants of services stock prices. Research community was represented by the service companies listed in Jordan&rsquo;s Amman Stock Exchange (ASE). The companies were selected to whose shares continued trading during the study period (2010-2015). The study sample was composed of (27) shareholding companies which were listed on the Amman Stock Exchange (ASE) during the afore mentioned period. The study results revealed that there was a significant impact of the factors selected such as: profits (distributed profits, return on assets and net cash flows from operations) on the market value of service companies share prices listed on ASE. The study recommended that further studies ought to be conducted to specify the factors that might affect the market value of listed companies&rsquo; shares.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document