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Short Selling and Firms' Disclosure of Bad News: Evidence from Regulation SHO

journal contribution
posted on 2022-09-29, 09:11 authored by Greg ClinchGreg Clinch, Wei Li, Yunyan Zhang
As informed traders, short sellers enhance the informativeness of stock prices, especially related to bad news, potentially reducing the benefits and increasing litigation and reputational costs of withholding bad news by managers. We exploit a quasi-natural experimental setting provided by the introduction of SEC regulation SHO (Reg-SHO), which significantly reduced the constraints faced by short sellers for an effectively randomly selected subsample of U.S. firms (pilot firms). Relative to control firms, we find pilot firms increase the likelihood of voluntary bad news management forecasts, provide these forecasts in a more timely manner, and accelerate the release of quarterly bad earnings news. Each of these effects is stronger for subsamples of moderate (compared with extreme) bad news, firms facing high (relative to low) litigation risks, and firms with a forecasting history. Similar effects are not observed for voluntary good news forecasts. A range of robustness tests reinforce our results. JEL Classifications: G14; D22; K22; K41; M40.

History

Journal

Journal of Financial Reporting

Volume

4

Pagination

1-23

Location

Lakewood Ranch, Fla.

ISSN

2380-2146

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

American Accounting Association

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