Does Political Uncertainty Obfuscate Narrative Disclosure?

The Accounting Review, Forthcoming

51 Pages Posted: 18 Jan 2024

See all articles by Mohamed A. Mekhaimer

Mohamed A. Mekhaimer

St. John Fisher University

Marwa Soliman

University of Ottawa

Weining Zhang

Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business

Date Written: December 5, 2023

Abstract

We examine the relation between political uncertainty and narrative disclosure complexity in conference calls. Using firm-level political uncertainty, we find that political uncertainty is positively associated with firms’ disclosures complexity as measured by the Fog index. Decomposing complexity into two latent components—information and obfuscation—we show that political uncertainty significantly increases the obfuscation but has no impact on the information. Further analysis reveals that complex disclosure is motivated by expected poor future performance amid political uncertainty. We also show that, during periods of heightened political uncertainty, obfuscated disclosure is associated with reduced earnings informativeness, increased dispersion in analyst forecasts, and higher volatility in forecast revisions. These findings are robust to including and excluding sentences containing complex political bigrams when calculating Fog. Further evidence shows that, during periods of political uncertainty, managers tend to use a more ambiguous tone and provide scripted and shorter (longer) responses to analysts’ questions (presentations).

Suggested Citation

Mekhaimer, Mohamed A. and Soliman, Marwa and Zhang, Weining, Does Political Uncertainty Obfuscate Narrative Disclosure? (December 5, 2023). The Accounting Review, Forthcoming, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4589597 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4589597

Mohamed A. Mekhaimer (Contact Author)

St. John Fisher University ( email )

3690 East Avenue
Rochester, NY 14618
United States

Marwa Soliman

University of Ottawa ( email )

55 Laurier Ave E
Ottawa, Ontario K1N 6N5
Canada

Weining Zhang

Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business ( email )

Oriental Plaza, Tower E3
One East Chang An Avenue
Beijing, 100738
China

HOME PAGE: http://english.ckgsb.edu.cn/FacultyResearch/Faculty/Accounting/ZhangWeining.aspx

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