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Price divergence from fundamental value and the value relevance of accounting information

journal contribution
posted on 2010-09-01, 00:00 authored by Simon FungSimon Fung, L Su, X Zhu
By employing two alternative measures of fundamental value, we reexamine the value relevance of accounting information over time. Consistent with some recent studies, we do not find evidence on the temporal decline in R 2s of conventional value-relevance regressions when the stock price is replaced by these measures as the dependent variable. Further, our results show that the divergence between fundamental value and the prevailing stock price (a) increases over time and (b) is associated with measures of noise trading and other arbitrage risks and costs. Additional analyses also reveal that proxies measuring the extent of noise trading increase over time. Overall, we do not find evidence that there is a loss over time in the value relevance of accounting information with respect to fundamental value. More importantly, we show that measures of price divergence are associated with noise trading as well as other arbitrage costs and risks (such as transaction costs and information uncertainty) that prohibit market prices from converging to fundamental values.

History

Journal

Contemporary accounting research

Volume

27

Season

Fall

Pagination

829-854

Location

Hoboken, N.J.

ISSN

0823-9150

eISSN

1911-3846

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2010, The Canadian Academic Accounting Association

Issue

3

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell

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