The Relevance of Accounting Information in a Stock Market Bubble: Evidence from Internet IPOs
Prior research shows that accounting information is relevant for stock valuation, failure prediction, performance evaluation, optimal contracting, and other decision-making contexts in relatively stable market settings. By contrast, accounting's role during stock market bubbles such as those in...
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sg-smu-ink.soa_research-19602013-05-14T05:30:08Z The Relevance of Accounting Information in a Stock Market Bubble: Evidence from Internet IPOs BHATTACHARYA, Nilabhra Demers, Elizabeth Joos, Philip Prior research shows that accounting information is relevant for stock valuation, failure prediction, performance evaluation, optimal contracting, and other decision-making contexts in relatively stable market settings. By contrast, accounting's role during stock market bubbles such as those involving a revolutionary emerging technology is the subject of considerable debate, and prominent market observers have alleged that outdated and flawed accounting practices contributed to the crash of the Internet-led high-tech bubble of the late 1990s. We address the issue of whether accounting data is informative in a stock market bubble by examining its failure prediction ability in the context of Internet IPOs, one of the most egregious and economically significant sectors of the high tech bubble. Our setting of young start-up firms is one in which there is relatively little room for managerial discretion with respect to accounting accruals; Internet firms' accounting earnings closely approximate operating cash flows. Yet in contrast to widespread criticisms of accounting and its alleged role in fueling the bubble, we find that accounting variables are highly informative for failure prediction; specifically, they are significant in explaining ex post realized Internet IPO failures. Using an existing IPO failure prediction methodology and two alternative definitions of innovative IPOs, we further show that ex ante, out-of-sample Internet IPO failure forecasts are associated with economically and statistically significant hedge returns. Our analyses suggest that the traditional financial reporting system could serve as an anchor during speculative bubbles. 2010-05-01T07:00:00Z text https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soa_research/961 info:doi/10.1111/j.1468-5957.2009.02144.x http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-5957.2009.02144.x Research Collection School Of Accountancy eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University stock bubbles IPO Internet failure prediction high tech innovation risk assessment accounting information market crash Accounting Corporate Finance Portfolio and Security Analysis |
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stock bubbles IPO Internet failure prediction high tech innovation risk assessment accounting information market crash Accounting Corporate Finance Portfolio and Security Analysis BHATTACHARYA, Nilabhra Demers, Elizabeth Joos, Philip The Relevance of Accounting Information in a Stock Market Bubble: Evidence from Internet IPOs |
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Prior research shows that accounting information is relevant for stock valuation, failure prediction, performance evaluation, optimal contracting, and other decision-making contexts in relatively stable market settings. By contrast, accounting's role during stock market bubbles such as those involving a revolutionary emerging technology is the subject of considerable debate, and prominent market observers have alleged that outdated and flawed accounting practices contributed to the crash of the Internet-led high-tech bubble of the late 1990s. We address the issue of whether accounting data is informative in a stock market bubble by examining its failure prediction ability in the context of Internet IPOs, one of the most egregious and economically significant sectors of the high tech bubble. Our setting of young start-up firms is one in which there is relatively little room for managerial discretion with respect to accounting accruals; Internet firms' accounting earnings closely approximate operating cash flows. Yet in contrast to widespread criticisms of accounting and its alleged role in fueling the bubble, we find that accounting variables are highly informative for failure prediction; specifically, they are significant in explaining ex post realized Internet IPO failures. Using an existing IPO failure prediction methodology and two alternative definitions of innovative IPOs, we further show that ex ante, out-of-sample Internet IPO failure forecasts are associated with economically and statistically significant hedge returns. Our analyses suggest that the traditional financial reporting system could serve as an anchor during speculative bubbles. |
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BHATTACHARYA, Nilabhra Demers, Elizabeth Joos, Philip |
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BHATTACHARYA, Nilabhra Demers, Elizabeth Joos, Philip |
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BHATTACHARYA, Nilabhra |
title |
The Relevance of Accounting Information in a Stock Market Bubble: Evidence from Internet IPOs |
title_short |
The Relevance of Accounting Information in a Stock Market Bubble: Evidence from Internet IPOs |
title_full |
The Relevance of Accounting Information in a Stock Market Bubble: Evidence from Internet IPOs |
title_fullStr |
The Relevance of Accounting Information in a Stock Market Bubble: Evidence from Internet IPOs |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Relevance of Accounting Information in a Stock Market Bubble: Evidence from Internet IPOs |
title_sort |
relevance of accounting information in a stock market bubble: evidence from internet ipos |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2010 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soa_research/961 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-5957.2009.02144.x |
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