Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5086732 | Journal of Accounting and Economics | 2013 | 19 Pages |
We provide evidence that firms with more transparent earnings enjoy a lower cost of capital. We base our earnings transparency measure on the extent to which earnings and change in earnings covary contemporaneously with returns. We find a significant negative relation between our transparency measure and subsequent excess and portfolio mean returns, and expected cost of capital, even after controlling for previously documented determinants of cost of capital.
⺠Our study is the first to establish a significant negative relation between earnings transparency and cost of capital. ⺠Our transparency measure is based on the extent to which earnings and change in earnings covary with stock returns. ⺠Our transparency measure permits cross-sectional and intertemporal variation in the returns-earnings relation. ⺠Firms with more transparent earnings have lower cost of capital as reflected in subsequent excess and portfolio mean returns ⺠More transparent earnings also are significantly negatively associated with expected cost of capital.