Communicating measurement uncertainty : an experimental study of financial reporting implications for managers and investors

Range disclosures of estimates, whether in an expanded auditor’s report or by managers, would be intended to communicate measurement uncertainty to investors. Knowing this information should enhance investors’ ability to identify aggressive reporting, thereby possibly increasing investor actions tak...

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Main Author: Majors, Tracie McDonald
Format: Others
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/23295
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-232952015-09-20T17:21:00ZCommunicating measurement uncertainty : an experimental study of financial reporting implications for managers and investorsMajors, Tracie McDonaldMeasurement uncertaintyEstimatesRange disclosurePersonalityExperimental economicsManager reportingInvestor actionsRange disclosures of estimates, whether in an expanded auditor’s report or by managers, would be intended to communicate measurement uncertainty to investors. Knowing this information should enhance investors’ ability to identify aggressive reporting, thereby possibly increasing investor actions taken against managers. In a laboratory experiment, I find that students in a managerial reporting role (hereafter, managers) report less aggressive estimates of an asset’s value when ranges of possible estimates accompany their point estimates reported to students in an investor role (hereafter, investors), such that investor actions against managers do not increase when ranges are disclosed. However, this decline in aggressiveness is concentrated in managers with a greater degree of association with one or more of the following personalities: psychopathy, narcissism, and Machiavellianism (collectively deemed the “Dark Triad” in psychology). Notably, this result occurs because, in a regime of no range disclosure, these managers report relatively aggressive estimates to investors, irrespective of their private information about the asset’s true value, while managers exhibiting low association with any of these personalities report estimates that more accurately reflect their private information. Range disclosure disciplines the former group of managers, which suggests that requiring range disclosure would discipline the reporting of the managers who are the most prone to take advantage of investors absent the communication of this information.text2014-02-24T16:18:43Z2013-122013-11-22December 20132014-02-24T16:18:44ZThesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/23295
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Measurement uncertainty
Estimates
Range disclosure
Personality
Experimental economics
Manager reporting
Investor actions
spellingShingle Measurement uncertainty
Estimates
Range disclosure
Personality
Experimental economics
Manager reporting
Investor actions
Majors, Tracie McDonald
Communicating measurement uncertainty : an experimental study of financial reporting implications for managers and investors
description Range disclosures of estimates, whether in an expanded auditor’s report or by managers, would be intended to communicate measurement uncertainty to investors. Knowing this information should enhance investors’ ability to identify aggressive reporting, thereby possibly increasing investor actions taken against managers. In a laboratory experiment, I find that students in a managerial reporting role (hereafter, managers) report less aggressive estimates of an asset’s value when ranges of possible estimates accompany their point estimates reported to students in an investor role (hereafter, investors), such that investor actions against managers do not increase when ranges are disclosed. However, this decline in aggressiveness is concentrated in managers with a greater degree of association with one or more of the following personalities: psychopathy, narcissism, and Machiavellianism (collectively deemed the “Dark Triad” in psychology). Notably, this result occurs because, in a regime of no range disclosure, these managers report relatively aggressive estimates to investors, irrespective of their private information about the asset’s true value, while managers exhibiting low association with any of these personalities report estimates that more accurately reflect their private information. Range disclosure disciplines the former group of managers, which suggests that requiring range disclosure would discipline the reporting of the managers who are the most prone to take advantage of investors absent the communication of this information. === text
author Majors, Tracie McDonald
author_facet Majors, Tracie McDonald
author_sort Majors, Tracie McDonald
title Communicating measurement uncertainty : an experimental study of financial reporting implications for managers and investors
title_short Communicating measurement uncertainty : an experimental study of financial reporting implications for managers and investors
title_full Communicating measurement uncertainty : an experimental study of financial reporting implications for managers and investors
title_fullStr Communicating measurement uncertainty : an experimental study of financial reporting implications for managers and investors
title_full_unstemmed Communicating measurement uncertainty : an experimental study of financial reporting implications for managers and investors
title_sort communicating measurement uncertainty : an experimental study of financial reporting implications for managers and investors
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/23295
work_keys_str_mv AT majorstraciemcdonald communicatingmeasurementuncertaintyanexperimentalstudyoffinancialreportingimplicationsformanagersandinvestors
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