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Analysts, macroeconomic news, and the benefit of active in-house economists

Version 2 2024-06-13, 10:28
Version 1 2017-03-31, 13:23
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-13, 10:28 authored by A Hugon, A Kumar, AP Lin
All rights reserved.Although macroeconomic news has a major impact on corporate earnings, anecdotal evidence suggests that financial analyst research is inefficient with respect to such news. Examining analysts' earnings research, we find that they underreact to negative macroeconomic news. Analysts are not all equal, though, as analysts employed at the same firm as an active macroeconomist underreact much less. We find that the benefit of analyst access to an economist is concentrated in firms that are high in cyclicality relative to their industry, high in cyclicality in general, and that are smaller in size. In addition, analysts who are exposed to more accurate or awardwinning in-house macroeconomists benefit more. Investors appear to recognize the advantage of access to macroeconomists, reacting more strongly to these analysts' forecast revisions. Overall, our results suggest that the presence of an active in-house macroeconomist improves the efficiency and credibility of analyst research.

History

Journal

Accounting review

Volume

91

Pagination

513-534

Location

Sarasota, Fla.

ISSN

0001-4826

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2016, American Accounting Association

Issue

2

Publisher

American Accounting Association

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