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The Impact of Management's Tone on the Perception of Management's Credibility in Forecasting

The Impact of Management's Tone on the Perception of Management's Credibility in Forecasting
Author: Robert D. Slater
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2007
Genre:
ISBN:

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ABSTRACT: The purpose of this study is to examine the impact of management altering its tone in communications on participants' perceptions of management credibility. Management's tone in communicating with participants was manipulated using communications from management under two treatment conditions. In period one of the study management's tone was manipulated within the management statement on internal controls as required by the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board's (PCAOB) Auditing Standards No. 2. In period one, participants had no knowledge of management's prior forecasting accuracy. Consistent with predicted hypotheses, the findings reveal that management can increase its credibility with participants by communicating its empathy, responsiveness, and understanding. Management's increased credibility was measured using both a validated credibility scale and by examining participants' reliance on management's forecasts. In period two of the study all participants had knowledge of management's forecast failure in period one. The results from period two found that tone could impact the rating of management's credibility when management had previously failed to meet a forecast but that tone had no impact on participant's changes in their earnings per share estimates after management had previously failed to meet a forecast.


The Joint Effect of Management's Prior Forecast Accuracy and the Form of its Financial Forecasts on Investor Judgment

The Joint Effect of Management's Prior Forecast Accuracy and the Form of its Financial Forecasts on Investor Judgment
Author: D. Eric Hirst
Publisher:
Total Pages: 30
Release: 2000
Genre:
ISBN:

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We examine how investor reaction to management earnings forecasts is a joint function of the form of the forecast and management's perceived credibility. In a laboratory experiment involving 126 individual investors, we compare investors' earnings predictions and their confidence therein after receiving point and closed range forecasts issued by managements whose previous forecasting accuracy is known to be either high or low. We used point and range forecasts, because they differ in the degree to which they communicate management's uncertainty about the future. We use management's prior forecasting accuracy as a measure of management's credibility, because prior research has documented the importance of this factor when considering the usefulness of management's voluntary forecasts.Our results show that, as expected, investors' earnings predictions are responsive to management's forecasts. However, as we hypothesized, forecast form did not influence investors' earnings estimates. In contrast, investors' confidence in their earnings predictions was influenced by the form of management's forecasts, but this effect emerged only when management was previously accurate in their forecasting. A similar interactive pattern was found in the dispersion of investors' predictions about the company's future earnings. Finally, consistent with the hypothesis that confidence is an important determinant of investor behavior, we find that investors' judgments of future stock price appreciation are a positive function of both unexpected earnings and the change in their confidence.Our study extends the literature on management forecasts by empirically testing the joint influence of management's credibility (i.e., forecasting accuracy) and forecast form. The prior literature has argued that both factors should be important, but has not delineated whether or how these two factors might interact. We present a theoretical framework that indicates when both factors should influence investor judgment.


The Impact of Forecast Roundness, Forecast Uncertainty, and Managers' Language on Investors' Judgments

The Impact of Forecast Roundness, Forecast Uncertainty, and Managers' Language on Investors' Judgments
Author: Jessica Osgood
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2017
Genre:
ISBN:

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Management forecasts can have varying degrees of roundness, including sharp (e.g., a sales growth forecast of 9.73% or 10.27%), explicitly round (e.g., 10.00%), and rounded (e.g., 10%). Prior archival research indicates investors rely less upon round than sharp forecasts (Bamber, Hui, and Yeung 2010), yet it is unclear why this occurs or how contextual features of earnings forecasts moderate this effect. Moreover, this prior research has not distinguished between the effects of explicitly round versus rounded estimates. I provide evidence that the impact of forecast roundness on willingness to invest depends upon forecast uncertainty. That is, rounded sales forecasts enhance management credibility and make investors more willing to invest, but only when the level of forecast uncertainty is higher. Furthermore I find that investors react to explicitly round and rounded forecasts differently (i.e., 10.00% versus 10%), with explicitly round forecasts leading to higher willingness to invest when uncertainty is lower versus when uncertainty is higher similar to rounded forecasts. I also examine and find that managers can alter their language to repair credibility concerns resulting from a mismatch between forecast roundness and forecast uncertainty. Overall, my results show how a change as seemingly innocuous as rounding a sales forecast can alter investors' perceptions of management credibility and their willingness to invest. For example, my findings suggest conditions in which companies using a sharp underlying sales forecast to meet an earnings target can improve investors' perceptions by simply rounding the sales forecast disclosed while keeping the underlying number sharp. To the extent that investors react negatively to a mismatch between forecast roundness and forecast uncertainty, my results provide information to financial managers about how to carefully construct earnings forecasts to limit these negative reactions.


Contemporaneous Verification of Language

Contemporaneous Verification of Language
Author: Stephen P. Baginski
Publisher:
Total Pages: 45
Release: 2015
Genre:
ISBN:

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Research documents that linguistic tone is incrementally informative about stock returns. What remains a puzzle is the mechanism by which investors can assess its credibility. We examine whether contemporaneous information in management earnings forecasts serves as a timely alternative to ex post verification. We document that ex post verifiable quantitative news in unbundled forecasts, and characteristics of the linguistic tone itself, affect investors' pricing of tone. Consistent with higher quality signals enhancing the credibility of contemporaneous lower quality signals, we find that quantitative news verifies the associated linguistic tone; when the two signals have the same sign, the price effect of tone is stronger. Furthermore, the pricing attenuation of tone is increasing in the imprecision of the quantitative forecast, suggesting that lower forecast quality compromises the quantitative signal's credibility enhancement. Managerial incentives to inflate tone lead to the verification effect being greater for optimistic language, while management's use of hyperbole results in attenuation of the tone's pricing.


Advances in Accounting Behavioral Research

Advances in Accounting Behavioral Research
Author: Donna Bobek Schmitt
Publisher: Emerald Group Publishing
Total Pages: 230
Release: 2015-10-01
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1784416355

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Advances in Accounting Behavioral Research addresses a wide range of issues that affect the users, preparers and assurers of accounting information. Volume 18 exemplifies this focus by including research from auditing, taxation and managerial and information systems.


Credibility of Management Forecasts

Credibility of Management Forecasts
Author: Jonathan L. Rogers
Publisher:
Total Pages: 51
Release: 2005
Genre:
ISBN:

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We examine how the market's ability to assess the truthfulness of management earnings forecasts affects the extent to which managers bias their forecasts, and we evaluate whether the market's response to management forecasts is consistent with it identifying the predictable bias in forecasts. We find that managers more likely to face litigation release less optimistic forecasts than managers less likely to face litigation, and this incentive is dampened when it is more difficult to detect whether managers have misrepresented their forward-looking information. Further, when it is more difficult to detect forecast bias, we find that managers are more likely to offer forecasts that increase their profits from insider transactions and managers of financially distressed firms are more optimistic than those of healthy firms. With regard to the stock price response to forecasts, we find the market's immediate response varies with the predictable bias in good but not bad news forecasts. The market's subsequent response, however, is consistent with investors eventually identifying the bias in bad news forecasts and modifying their valuation of the firm in the appropriate direction.


Credibility of Management Forecasts

Credibility of Management Forecasts
Author: Jonathan L. Roger
Publisher:
Total Pages: 35
Release: 2002
Genre: Business forecasting
ISBN:

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