Accounting and Finance Department Research Seminar
When: Friday,
November 22, 2024
10:00 AM
-
11:15 AM
Where: > See description for location
Description: The Department of Accounting & Finance announces the following research seminar.
Speaker: Professor. Yanhua Sunny Yang (University of Connecticut)
Title: The Impact of Reduced In-Person Contact on Information Quality: The Case of Analyst Forecast Accuracy during Covid Lockdowns
Date: Friday, November 22, 2024
Time: 10:00-11:15 AM
Location: via Zoom Meeting
Meeting ID: 438 755 1509
Abstract: This paper examines whether and how in-person communication influences the quality of information available to market participants. We utilize the lockdown periods during the Covid-19 pandemic as a proxy for the exogenous reduction in in-person communication, and analyst forecast accuracy as a proxy for information quality. We document that when firms headquarter states undergo lockdowns, analyst forecasts for these firms issued in the lockdown periods are significantly less accurate than for other firms or other periods, with an average difference of about 7% of the mean value of absolute forecast errors. Supplemental analyses show greater differences when companies convert from in-person to virtual events despite holding more of the latter, and insignificant differences when firms maintain virtual-to-virtual events. The difference is also greater when analysts have less firm-specific experience or cover more industries, or when firms are smaller or younger. In addition, analysts input more effort and display more divergent opinions during the lockdown periods. The collective results indicate that when there is less in-person communication forecast quality is lower despite more effort and similar or higher frequency of virtual communication.
For additional information, please contact Prof. Hongkang Xu at hxu5@umassd.edu.
Speaker: Professor. Yanhua Sunny Yang (University of Connecticut)
Title: The Impact of Reduced In-Person Contact on Information Quality: The Case of Analyst Forecast Accuracy during Covid Lockdowns
Date: Friday, November 22, 2024
Time: 10:00-11:15 AM
Location: via Zoom Meeting
Meeting ID: 438 755 1509
Abstract: This paper examines whether and how in-person communication influences the quality of information available to market participants. We utilize the lockdown periods during the Covid-19 pandemic as a proxy for the exogenous reduction in in-person communication, and analyst forecast accuracy as a proxy for information quality. We document that when firms headquarter states undergo lockdowns, analyst forecasts for these firms issued in the lockdown periods are significantly less accurate than for other firms or other periods, with an average difference of about 7% of the mean value of absolute forecast errors. Supplemental analyses show greater differences when companies convert from in-person to virtual events despite holding more of the latter, and insignificant differences when firms maintain virtual-to-virtual events. The difference is also greater when analysts have less firm-specific experience or cover more industries, or when firms are smaller or younger. In addition, analysts input more effort and display more divergent opinions during the lockdown periods. The collective results indicate that when there is less in-person communication forecast quality is lower despite more effort and similar or higher frequency of virtual communication.
For additional information, please contact Prof. Hongkang Xu at hxu5@umassd.edu.
Contact: > See Description for contact information
Topical Areas: Faculty, Students, Academic Affairs, Accounting and Finance