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The intertwining of financial analyst behaviour and web-based performance transparency

Walter Aerts, Denis Cormier and Michel Magnan ()

Working Papers from University of Antwerp, Faculty of Business and Economics

Abstract: The purpose of this study is to assess how a firm’s disclosure regarding its web-based performance disclosure maps into financial analysts’ earnings forecasts. We assert and empirically test that the determination of a firm’s web-based performance disclosure and financial analysts’ earnings forecasting work are closely intertwined processes. However, such endogeneity in capital markets’ performance information dissemination and use is strongly influenced by a country’s governance regime. On the one hand, North American countries (United States and Canada) exhibit a corporate governance regime that encompasses strong investor protection, largely diffuse corporate ownership and a focus on shareholder value creation. On the other hand, continental European countries (France, Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands) exhibit a corporate governance regime with weaker investor protection, a prevalence of large-block shareholding and significant input into the corporate decision-making process by non-shareholder groups such as labour and other social interest organisations. The continental European context will lead corporate managers to refrain from some disclosures and will attenuate the value of financial analysts’ activities. Our sample comprises 678 firms, with web-based performance information being collected from corporate web sites and analysts’ earnings forecasts being obtained from IBES. Results from simultaneous equation regressions document significant interrelationships between financial analysts’ activities and corporate disclosure transparency for North American firms. We observe that analyst following drives web-based performance disclosure and results in the web-based performance disclosure that reduces the dispersion of analysts' earnings forecasts. These results are consistent with the shareholder model of corporate governance. For continental European firms, no significant relationships emerges between web-based performance disclosure, analyst following and analyst forecasts' dispersion, although web-based performance disclosure related to intangible capital, and quantitative/monetary disclosure content are associated with market-to-book premium. Overall our results suggest that in continental Europe web-based performance disclosure is much less affected by financial market concerns than in North America, a result consistent with a less unilaterally focused stakeholder model of corporate governance.

Pages: 49 pages
Date: 2006-03
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