Reliability-Relevance Trade-Offs and the Efficiency of Aggregation
38 Pages Posted: 14 Jul 2004
Abstract
This paper studies how an accountant's method of aggregating information in a financial report is affected by differences in the reliability and relevance of components of the report. We study a firm that hires an accountant to produce a report that reveals information to investors regarding the returns to the firm's past investments. In constructing the report, the accountant must combine information elicited from the firm's manager with other information directly observable to the accountant. The manager's information is assumed to be directly observable only by the manager and to be of superior quality to the other information available to the accountant. Reliability-relevance trade-offs arise because as the accountant places more weight on the manager's report, potentially more useful information gets included in the report, at the cost of encouraging the manager to distort his or her information to a greater extent. Capital market participants anticipate this behavior and price the firm accordingly. We show how the market's price response to the release of the firm's aggregate report, the efficiency of the firm's investment decisions, and the manager's incentives to manipulate the soft information under his or her control are all affected by - and affect - the aggregation procedure the accountant adopts. In addition, we identify a broad range of circumstances under which aggregated reports are strictly more efficient than disaggregated reports because aggregation tempers the manager's misreporting incentives. We also demonstrate that, as any given component of the aggregated accounting report becomes softer, the equilibrium level of the firm's investment diminishes and the market places greater weight on the remaining components of the report.
JEL Classification: G12, G31, D82, M41, M44, M45
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Stock Price, Earnings and Book Value in Managerial Performance Measures
-
Imprecision in Accounting Measurement: Can it Be Value Enhancing?
By Chandra Kanodia, Rajdeep Singh, ...
-
Earnings Quality Metrics and What They Measure
By Ralf Ewert and Alfred Wagenhofer
-
Accounting Measurement Basis, Market Mispricing, and Firm Investment Efficiency
By Pierre Jinghong Liang and Xiaoyan Wen
-
Voluntary Disclosure, Manipulation and Real Effects
By Anne Beyer and Ilan Guttman
-
Earnings Forecast, Earnings Management, and Asymmetric Price Response
By Baohua Xin
-
By Kathryn Kadous, Molly Mercer, ...
-
By Eti Einhorn and Amir Ziv