Monthly Employment Reports and the Pricing of Firm-Level Earnings News

<p>I use the monthly release of the Employment Situation (ES) by the Bureau of Labor Statistics to examine the impact of macroeconomic uncertainty on the pricing of firm-level earnings news. I use this setting because uncertainty about employment conditions is high the day before the employme...

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Main Author: Melessa, Samuel Joseph
Other Authors: Schipper, Katherine
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10161/5759
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spelling ndltd-DUKE-oai-dukespace.lib.duke.edu-10161-57592013-01-07T20:08:07ZMonthly Employment Reports and the Pricing of Firm-Level Earnings NewsMelessa, Samuel JosephAccounting<p>I use the monthly release of the Employment Situation (ES) by the Bureau of Labor Statistics to examine the impact of macroeconomic uncertainty on the pricing of firm-level earnings news. I use this setting because uncertainty about employment conditions is high the day before the employment report is released and is resolved just after the release of the report. I find a muted initial response to earnings announcements made the day before the employment report. This effect is stronger when ex-ante uncertainty about the contents of the employment report is high. The muted initial response is followed by a stronger-than-usual earning-return relation measured two days after the earnings announcement, or the day after the release of the employment report. These results are consistent with investors applying less weight to earnings signals when there is high uncertainty about macroeconomic conditions, and increasing the weight applied to these signals after the resolution of macroeconomic uncertainty. I consider earnings announcements made on employment-report Fridays and find a muted initial market response followed by greater-than-usual post-earnings-announcement drift. Finally, I find the proportion of bad news earnings announcements (negative unexpected earnings) is significantly higher on employment-report Fridays than on other days, including other Fridays.</p>DissertationSchipper, Katherine2012Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/10161/5759
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Accounting
spellingShingle Accounting
Melessa, Samuel Joseph
Monthly Employment Reports and the Pricing of Firm-Level Earnings News
description <p>I use the monthly release of the Employment Situation (ES) by the Bureau of Labor Statistics to examine the impact of macroeconomic uncertainty on the pricing of firm-level earnings news. I use this setting because uncertainty about employment conditions is high the day before the employment report is released and is resolved just after the release of the report. I find a muted initial response to earnings announcements made the day before the employment report. This effect is stronger when ex-ante uncertainty about the contents of the employment report is high. The muted initial response is followed by a stronger-than-usual earning-return relation measured two days after the earnings announcement, or the day after the release of the employment report. These results are consistent with investors applying less weight to earnings signals when there is high uncertainty about macroeconomic conditions, and increasing the weight applied to these signals after the resolution of macroeconomic uncertainty. I consider earnings announcements made on employment-report Fridays and find a muted initial market response followed by greater-than-usual post-earnings-announcement drift. Finally, I find the proportion of bad news earnings announcements (negative unexpected earnings) is significantly higher on employment-report Fridays than on other days, including other Fridays.</p> === Dissertation
author2 Schipper, Katherine
author_facet Schipper, Katherine
Melessa, Samuel Joseph
author Melessa, Samuel Joseph
author_sort Melessa, Samuel Joseph
title Monthly Employment Reports and the Pricing of Firm-Level Earnings News
title_short Monthly Employment Reports and the Pricing of Firm-Level Earnings News
title_full Monthly Employment Reports and the Pricing of Firm-Level Earnings News
title_fullStr Monthly Employment Reports and the Pricing of Firm-Level Earnings News
title_full_unstemmed Monthly Employment Reports and the Pricing of Firm-Level Earnings News
title_sort monthly employment reports and the pricing of firm-level earnings news
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10161/5759
work_keys_str_mv AT melessasamueljoseph monthlyemploymentreportsandthepricingoffirmlevelearningsnews
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