Early Evidence on the Informativeness of the Sec's Market Risk Disclosures: The Case of Commodity Price Risk Exposure of Oil and Gas Producers

Posted: 9 Jun 1999

See all articles by Shivaram Rajgopal

Shivaram Rajgopal

Columbia University - Columbia Business School, Accounting, Business Law & Taxation

Abstract

The paper provides early evidence on the informativeness of commodity price risk measures required by the Securities and Exchange Commission's new market risk disclosure rules (SEC 1997). I use existing disclosures of oil and gas producers (O&G) to obtain proxies for the tabular and sensitivity analysis disclosures required by the new SEC rules. I find that proxies for the tabular and the sensitivity analysis format are significantly associated with O&G firms' stock return sensitivities to oil and gas price movements. This finding casts doubt on claims that the new market risk disclosures do not reflect firms' risk exposures. The proxies for the tabular format and sensitivity format disclosures are not substitutable explanations of firms' risk exposures. This evidence suggests that disclosures from one disclosure format are not comparable to those from the other reporting format.

JEL Classification: G14, G38, M45

Suggested Citation

Rajgopal, Shivaram, Early Evidence on the Informativeness of the Sec's Market Risk Disclosures: The Case of Commodity Price Risk Exposure of Oil and Gas Producers. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=159954

Shivaram Rajgopal (Contact Author)

Columbia University - Columbia Business School, Accounting, Business Law & Taxation ( email )

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New York, NY 10027
United States

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