Do Analysts See through Misreporting? Evidence from SEC-Enforced Misreporting Casesopen access
- Authors
- 권세원; 안재환; 정선문
- Issue Date
- Nov-2025
- Publisher
- 사람과세계경영학회
- Keywords
- sell-side analysts; earnings forecasts; misreporting commission; misreporting detection
- Citation
- Global Business and Finance Review, v.30, no.11, pp 46 - 63
- Pages
- 18
- Indexed
- SCOPUS
KCI
- Journal Title
- Global Business and Finance Review
- Volume
- 30
- Number
- 11
- Start Page
- 46
- End Page
- 63
- URI
- https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/62239
- DOI
- 10.17549/gbfr.2025.30.11.46
- ISSN
- 1088-6931
2384-1648
- Abstract
- Purpose: This study examines the role of analysts as information intermediaries in detecting misreporting at the time it occurs, focusing on income-increasing misreporting cases identified by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
Design/methodology/approach: Using a propensity-score matched sample and various econometric approaches, we analyze dynamic changes in analysts' earnings forecast bias for misreporting firms relative to non-misreporting counterfactuals with similar ex ante misreporting probabilities, particularly around the first year of misreporting.
Findings: Our results indicate that analysts issue more conservative (i.e., less optimistic) earnings forecasts for misreporting firms than for non-misreporting counterfactuals. This suggests that analysts can discern manipulated earnings, supporting the rational forecasting view.
Research limitations/implications: Despite our attempt to address potential endogeneity between corporate misreporting and analysts' earnings forecasts, causal inference remains subject to assumptions inherent in our econometric approaches. Nevertheless, the consistency and robustness of our findings across various methods reinforce the credibility of our conclusions. Our results suggest that analysts can identify misreporting early and issue preemptive warnings.
Originality/value: This study provides novel evidence that analysts can discern overstated earnings at the time of misreporting. Its findings deepen our understanding of analysts' role as information intermediaries in financial markets.
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Collections - Dongguk Business School > Department of Accounting > 1. Journal Articles

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