Market perceptions of efficiency and news in analyst forecast errors

Financial analysts are considered inefficient when they do not fully incorporate relevant information into their forecasts. In this dissertation, I investigate differences in the observable efficiency of analysts' earnings forecasts between firms that consistently meet or exceed analysts'...

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Main Author: Chevis, Gia Marie
Other Authors: Sivaramakrishnan, K.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Texas A&M University 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/1136
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spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-11362013-01-08T10:37:27ZMarket perceptions of efficiency and news in analyst forecast errorsChevis, Gia Marieanalyst forecastsforecast errorsforecast efficiencyFinancial analysts are considered inefficient when they do not fully incorporate relevant information into their forecasts. In this dissertation, I investigate differences in the observable efficiency of analysts' earnings forecasts between firms that consistently meet or exceed analysts' earnings expectations and those that do not. I then analyze the extent to which the market incorporates this (in)efficiency into its earnings expectations. Consistent with my hypotheses, I find that analysts are relatively less efficient with respect to prior returns for firms that do not consistently meet expectations than for firms that do follow such a strategy, especially when prior returns convey bad news. However, forecast errors for firms that consistently meet expectations do not appear to be serially correlated to a greater extent than those for firms that do not consistently meet expectations. It is not clear whether the market considers such inefficiency when setting its own expectations. While the evidence suggests they may do so in the context of a shorter historical pattern of realized forecast errors, other evidence suggests they may not distinguish between predictable and surprise components of forecast error when the historical forecast error pattern is more established.Texas A&M UniversitySivaramakrishnan, K.Rees, Lynn2004-11-15T19:47:27Z2004-11-15T19:47:27Z2003-082004-11-15T19:47:27ZElectronic Dissertationtext264317 bytes87024 byteselectronicapplication/pdftext/plainborn digitalhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/1136en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic analyst forecasts
forecast errors
forecast efficiency
spellingShingle analyst forecasts
forecast errors
forecast efficiency
Chevis, Gia Marie
Market perceptions of efficiency and news in analyst forecast errors
description Financial analysts are considered inefficient when they do not fully incorporate relevant information into their forecasts. In this dissertation, I investigate differences in the observable efficiency of analysts' earnings forecasts between firms that consistently meet or exceed analysts' earnings expectations and those that do not. I then analyze the extent to which the market incorporates this (in)efficiency into its earnings expectations. Consistent with my hypotheses, I find that analysts are relatively less efficient with respect to prior returns for firms that do not consistently meet expectations than for firms that do follow such a strategy, especially when prior returns convey bad news. However, forecast errors for firms that consistently meet expectations do not appear to be serially correlated to a greater extent than those for firms that do not consistently meet expectations. It is not clear whether the market considers such inefficiency when setting its own expectations. While the evidence suggests they may do so in the context of a shorter historical pattern of realized forecast errors, other evidence suggests they may not distinguish between predictable and surprise components of forecast error when the historical forecast error pattern is more established.
author2 Sivaramakrishnan, K.
author_facet Sivaramakrishnan, K.
Chevis, Gia Marie
author Chevis, Gia Marie
author_sort Chevis, Gia Marie
title Market perceptions of efficiency and news in analyst forecast errors
title_short Market perceptions of efficiency and news in analyst forecast errors
title_full Market perceptions of efficiency and news in analyst forecast errors
title_fullStr Market perceptions of efficiency and news in analyst forecast errors
title_full_unstemmed Market perceptions of efficiency and news in analyst forecast errors
title_sort market perceptions of efficiency and news in analyst forecast errors
publisher Texas A&M University
publishDate 2004
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/1136
work_keys_str_mv AT chevisgiamarie marketperceptionsofefficiencyandnewsinanalystforecasterrors
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