How does the stock market respond to R&D cuts used to manage earnings?
Prior research shows returns are positive when firms meet or beat analysts’ consensus forecasts but negative when firms miss. Past studies also show managers frequently cut R&D expenses in order to meet the consensus forecast. Despite these findings, there is limited evide...
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ndltd-uoregon.edu-oai-scholarsbank.uoregon.edu-1794-204382018-12-20T05:48:26Z How does the stock market respond to R&D cuts used to manage earnings? Li, Zhaochu Wilson, Ryan Earnings management Managerial myopia R&D Prior research shows returns are positive when firms meet or beat analysts’ consensus forecasts but negative when firms miss. Past studies also show managers frequently cut R&D expenses in order to meet the consensus forecast. Despite these findings, there is limited evidence about how the market responds when firms beat the forecast by cutting R&D. This study shows the stock market penalizes firms that use R&D cuts to manage earnings and exacts a discount to the market reward if beating the forecast requires cutting R&D. The discount is only partial and firms are still better off doing so in the short run. Furthermore, this study shows the R&D cuts used to manage earnings are concentrated in specific industries and are likely temporary, as firms tend to increase R&D spending in the subsequent period. Investors appear to recognize these short-term cuts and treat them similar to accruals. 10000-01-01 2016-10-27T18:35:11Z 2016-10-27 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/1794/20438 en_US All Rights Reserved. University of Oregon |
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en_US |
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topic |
Earnings management Managerial myopia R&D |
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Earnings management Managerial myopia R&D Li, Zhaochu How does the stock market respond to R&D cuts used to manage earnings? |
description |
Prior research shows returns are positive when firms meet or beat analysts’ consensus forecasts but negative when firms miss. Past studies also show managers frequently cut R&D expenses in order to meet the consensus forecast. Despite these findings, there is limited evidence about how the market responds when firms beat the forecast by cutting R&D. This study shows the stock market penalizes firms that use R&D cuts to manage earnings and exacts a discount to the market reward if beating the forecast requires cutting R&D. The discount is only partial and firms are still better off doing so in the short run. Furthermore, this study shows the R&D cuts used to manage earnings are concentrated in specific industries and are likely temporary, as firms tend to increase R&D spending in the subsequent period. Investors appear to recognize these short-term cuts and treat them similar to accruals. === 10000-01-01 |
author2 |
Wilson, Ryan |
author_facet |
Wilson, Ryan Li, Zhaochu |
author |
Li, Zhaochu |
author_sort |
Li, Zhaochu |
title |
How does the stock market respond to R&D cuts used to manage earnings? |
title_short |
How does the stock market respond to R&D cuts used to manage earnings? |
title_full |
How does the stock market respond to R&D cuts used to manage earnings? |
title_fullStr |
How does the stock market respond to R&D cuts used to manage earnings? |
title_full_unstemmed |
How does the stock market respond to R&D cuts used to manage earnings? |
title_sort |
how does the stock market respond to r&d cuts used to manage earnings? |
publisher |
University of Oregon |
publishDate |
2016 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/20438 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT lizhaochu howdoesthestockmarketrespondtordcutsusedtomanageearnings |
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