Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1005319 International Journal of Accounting Information Systems 2016 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We investigate the stopping rules used by nonprofessional investors.•Stopping rules determine when the information gathered is sufficient to terminate search.•Stopping rule use affects the amount and type of information gathered.•Investors include minimal financial information in their search.

Regulators are concerned that the information overload in the current Internet-based disclosure environment may cause investors to overlook important information. To gain a better understanding of the information set gathered by investors, this study incorporates theories from information systems research to examine the cognitive stopping rules used by investors to terminate information search. We survey nonprofessional investors to gain insight into what information they gather and when they determine they have enough information to stop searching and make an investment decision. Demographic analysis shows that investor characteristics are associated with the particular stopping rule used. In addition, results show that the stopping rule used affects the amount and type of information gathered. We find that, in general, investors include very little financial information in their search, and the amount gathered depends on the stopping rule employed. Our results call into question the decision usefulness of accounting information for nonprofessional investors and should be of interest to accounting information systems researchers, regulators, and accounting practitioners.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Business, Management and Accounting Accounting
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