Earnings response coefficient: applying individual and portfolio methods

This paper reports new findings from applying portfolio method, which shows a much bigger earnings impact on share prices (ERC) compared to the erstwhile reports of ERC using individual events, averaged over the sample. We estimate cumulative abnormal returns, CAR, across a test window for each quar...

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Main Authors: Al-Baidhani, Ahmed Mohsen, Abdullah, Amalina, Ariff, M., Cheng, F. F., Karbhari, Y.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Virtus Interpress 2017
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/61531/1/Earnings%20response%20coefficient%2C%20applying%20individual%20and%20portfolio%20methods.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/61531/
https://virtusinterpress.org/EARNINGS-RESPONSE-COEFFICIENT.html
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spelling my.upm.eprints.615312022-05-25T03:06:40Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/61531/ Earnings response coefficient: applying individual and portfolio methods Al-Baidhani, Ahmed Mohsen Abdullah, Amalina Ariff, M. Cheng, F. F. Karbhari, Y. This paper reports new findings from applying portfolio method, which shows a much bigger earnings impact on share prices (ERC) compared to the erstwhile reports of ERC using individual events, averaged over the sample. We estimate cumulative abnormal returns, CAR, across a test window for each quarterly earnings announcement event across one accounting year. The CARs are then regressed against earnings changes of individual firms and portfolios. The findings show a significant positive CAR when earnings increases; and a negative CAR if earnings declines. The ERC is very small in the test period of 2001-14, which is consistent with published results for years before 2000. The ERC size magnifies substantially due to the grouping effect used through portfolio formation. What is significant is that the use of portfolio method, by removing the idiosyncratic errors, show a price response very close to the size of earnings. The last evidence supports strongly the value relevance accounting theory that has not seen much support from averaging the price responses of individual event responses. Virtus Interpress 2017 Article PeerReviewed text en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/61531/1/Earnings%20response%20coefficient%2C%20applying%20individual%20and%20portfolio%20methods.pdf Al-Baidhani, Ahmed Mohsen and Abdullah, Amalina and Ariff, M. and Cheng, F. F. and Karbhari, Y. (2017) Earnings response coefficient: applying individual and portfolio methods. Corporate Ownership and Control, 14 (3). 188 - 196. ISSN 1727-9232; ESSN: 1810-3057 https://virtusinterpress.org/EARNINGS-RESPONSE-COEFFICIENT.html 10.22495/cocv14i3c1art4
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
description This paper reports new findings from applying portfolio method, which shows a much bigger earnings impact on share prices (ERC) compared to the erstwhile reports of ERC using individual events, averaged over the sample. We estimate cumulative abnormal returns, CAR, across a test window for each quarterly earnings announcement event across one accounting year. The CARs are then regressed against earnings changes of individual firms and portfolios. The findings show a significant positive CAR when earnings increases; and a negative CAR if earnings declines. The ERC is very small in the test period of 2001-14, which is consistent with published results for years before 2000. The ERC size magnifies substantially due to the grouping effect used through portfolio formation. What is significant is that the use of portfolio method, by removing the idiosyncratic errors, show a price response very close to the size of earnings. The last evidence supports strongly the value relevance accounting theory that has not seen much support from averaging the price responses of individual event responses.
format Article
author Al-Baidhani, Ahmed Mohsen
Abdullah, Amalina
Ariff, M.
Cheng, F. F.
Karbhari, Y.
spellingShingle Al-Baidhani, Ahmed Mohsen
Abdullah, Amalina
Ariff, M.
Cheng, F. F.
Karbhari, Y.
Earnings response coefficient: applying individual and portfolio methods
author_facet Al-Baidhani, Ahmed Mohsen
Abdullah, Amalina
Ariff, M.
Cheng, F. F.
Karbhari, Y.
author_sort Al-Baidhani, Ahmed Mohsen
title Earnings response coefficient: applying individual and portfolio methods
title_short Earnings response coefficient: applying individual and portfolio methods
title_full Earnings response coefficient: applying individual and portfolio methods
title_fullStr Earnings response coefficient: applying individual and portfolio methods
title_full_unstemmed Earnings response coefficient: applying individual and portfolio methods
title_sort earnings response coefficient: applying individual and portfolio methods
publisher Virtus Interpress
publishDate 2017
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/61531/1/Earnings%20response%20coefficient%2C%20applying%20individual%20and%20portfolio%20methods.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/61531/
https://virtusinterpress.org/EARNINGS-RESPONSE-COEFFICIENT.html
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score 13.211869