Financial reporting opacity and expected crash risk: Evidence from implied volatility smirks
The recent financial crisis has stimulated a renewed interest in understanding the determinants of stock price crash risk (i.e., left tail risk). Recent research shows that opaque financial reports enable managers to hide and accumulate bad news for extended periods. When the accumulated bad news re...
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sg-smu-ink.soa_research-27292018-05-28T09:28:20Z Financial reporting opacity and expected crash risk: Evidence from implied volatility smirks KIM, Jeong-Bon ZHANG, Liandong The recent financial crisis has stimulated a renewed interest in understanding the determinants of stock price crash risk (i.e., left tail risk). Recent research shows that opaque financial reports enable managers to hide and accumulate bad news for extended periods. When the accumulated bad news reaches certain tipping point, it will be suddenly released to the market at once, resulting in an abrupt decline in stock price (i.e., a crash). This study extends this line of research by examining the impact of financial reporting opacity on perceived or expected crash risk. Prominent economists, such as Olivier Blanchard, argue that removing the perception of tail risks (in addition to realized tail risks) is crucial in restoring investor confidence and stabilizing the stock market. Using the steepness of option implied volatility skew as a proxy for perceived crash risk, we find that accrual management, the presence of financial statement restatements, and auditor-attested internal control weakness are all positively and significantly associated with the level of perceived crash risk. Our results suggest that improving financial reporting transparency is an important mechanism for firms and policymakers to reduce the perception of tail risks and stabilize the stock market. 2014-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soa_research/1702 info:doi/10.1111/1911-3846.12048 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soa_research/article/2729/viewcontent/FinancialReportingOpacity_2013_pp.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection School Of Accountancy eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University Financial Reporting Opacity Expected Crash Risk Implied Volatility Smirk Internal Control Weakness Restatements Accounting Corporate Finance |
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Financial Reporting Opacity Expected Crash Risk Implied Volatility Smirk Internal Control Weakness Restatements Accounting Corporate Finance KIM, Jeong-Bon ZHANG, Liandong Financial reporting opacity and expected crash risk: Evidence from implied volatility smirks |
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The recent financial crisis has stimulated a renewed interest in understanding the determinants of stock price crash risk (i.e., left tail risk). Recent research shows that opaque financial reports enable managers to hide and accumulate bad news for extended periods. When the accumulated bad news reaches certain tipping point, it will be suddenly released to the market at once, resulting in an abrupt decline in stock price (i.e., a crash). This study extends this line of research by examining the impact of financial reporting opacity on perceived or expected crash risk. Prominent economists, such as Olivier Blanchard, argue that removing the perception of tail risks (in addition to realized tail risks) is crucial in restoring investor confidence and stabilizing the stock market. Using the steepness of option implied volatility skew as a proxy for perceived crash risk, we find that accrual management, the presence of financial statement restatements, and auditor-attested internal control weakness are all positively and significantly associated with the level of perceived crash risk. Our results suggest that improving financial reporting transparency is an important mechanism for firms and policymakers to reduce the perception of tail risks and stabilize the stock market. |
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KIM, Jeong-Bon ZHANG, Liandong |
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KIM, Jeong-Bon ZHANG, Liandong |
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KIM, Jeong-Bon |
title |
Financial reporting opacity and expected crash risk: Evidence from implied volatility smirks |
title_short |
Financial reporting opacity and expected crash risk: Evidence from implied volatility smirks |
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Financial reporting opacity and expected crash risk: Evidence from implied volatility smirks |
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Financial reporting opacity and expected crash risk: Evidence from implied volatility smirks |
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Financial reporting opacity and expected crash risk: Evidence from implied volatility smirks |
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financial reporting opacity and expected crash risk: evidence from implied volatility smirks |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2014 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soa_research/1702 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soa_research/article/2729/viewcontent/FinancialReportingOpacity_2013_pp.pdf |
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