Facebook posting activity and the selective amplification of earnings disclosures

This study examines the determinants of Facebook activity levels with a particular focus on Facebook activity around earnings announcements. Facebook activity is generally higher for firms with higher levels of analyst following, individual ownership, and trading volume, indicating that it is respon...

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Main Authors: Rajib Hasan, William M. Cready
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-06-01
Series:China Journal of Accounting Research
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1755309118300601
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spelling doaj-732763167af1492a9dcb34fd29d16aec2020-11-25T00:27:51ZengElsevierChina Journal of Accounting Research1755-30912019-06-01122135155Facebook posting activity and the selective amplification of earnings disclosuresRajib Hasan0William M. Cready1University of Houston – Clear Lake, 2700 Bay Area Blvd., Box 42, Houston, TX 77058, United StatesThe University of Texas at Dallas, 800 West Campbell Road, JSOM 4.801, Richardson, TX 75080, United StatesThis study examines the determinants of Facebook activity levels with a particular focus on Facebook activity around earnings announcements. Facebook activity is generally higher for firms with higher levels of analyst following, individual ownership, and trading volume, indicating that it is responsive to investor demand effects. Facebook activity also increases around earnings announcements, with the increase being largely attributable to posts containing earnings news. In general, therefore, firms use Facebook posts to amplify earnings news. Such activity is selective, however; it is lower for firms with high levels of information asymmetry, for firms reporting earnings that exactly meet the consensus analyst forecast amount, and when the earnings news is negative but the accompanying price movement is positive. Hence, firms appear to use Facebook to manage the level of attention paid to earnings news. Keywords: Social media, Disclosures, Earnings announcementshttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1755309118300601
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rajib Hasan
William M. Cready
spellingShingle Rajib Hasan
William M. Cready
Facebook posting activity and the selective amplification of earnings disclosures
China Journal of Accounting Research
author_facet Rajib Hasan
William M. Cready
author_sort Rajib Hasan
title Facebook posting activity and the selective amplification of earnings disclosures
title_short Facebook posting activity and the selective amplification of earnings disclosures
title_full Facebook posting activity and the selective amplification of earnings disclosures
title_fullStr Facebook posting activity and the selective amplification of earnings disclosures
title_full_unstemmed Facebook posting activity and the selective amplification of earnings disclosures
title_sort facebook posting activity and the selective amplification of earnings disclosures
publisher Elsevier
series China Journal of Accounting Research
issn 1755-3091
publishDate 2019-06-01
description This study examines the determinants of Facebook activity levels with a particular focus on Facebook activity around earnings announcements. Facebook activity is generally higher for firms with higher levels of analyst following, individual ownership, and trading volume, indicating that it is responsive to investor demand effects. Facebook activity also increases around earnings announcements, with the increase being largely attributable to posts containing earnings news. In general, therefore, firms use Facebook posts to amplify earnings news. Such activity is selective, however; it is lower for firms with high levels of information asymmetry, for firms reporting earnings that exactly meet the consensus analyst forecast amount, and when the earnings news is negative but the accompanying price movement is positive. Hence, firms appear to use Facebook to manage the level of attention paid to earnings news. Keywords: Social media, Disclosures, Earnings announcements
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1755309118300601
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