Conservative analysts react more to negative news than positive news, and the market response is greater for forecast revisions from conservative analysts (Hugon and Muslu, 2010; Keskek and Tse, 2018). Little is known about how firms and managers respond to a lower benchmark resulting from having a more conservative analyst following. We examine the effect of analyst conservatism on firms just meeting or beating the benchmark via accrual-based earnings management. We find that firms with a more conservative analyst following have lower earnings benchmarks and are more likely to just meet or beat the consensus. Additionally, these firms meet the lower benchmark with lower levels of earnings management, with this effect being strongest in poor information environments. Collectively, our results suggest that management’s benchmark meeting behavior is impacted by the conservatism of the firm’s analyst following.
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Research Article|
April 04 2022
The Effect of Analyst Conservatism on Meeting the Consensus via Earnings Management
Matt Bjornsen
;
Matt Bjornsen
UNITED STATES
University of Nebraska-Kearney,
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Bryan G. Brockbank
;
Bryan G. Brockbank
Oklahoma State University
Assistant Professor
Accounting
321 Business Building
UNITED STATES
Stillwater
Oklahoma
74078
4057448624
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Jaclyn Prentice
Jaclyn Prentice
Oklahoma State University
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Received:
July 01 2020
Revision Received:
August 17 2021
Revision Received:
February 25 2022
Accepted:
March 31 2022
Online Issn: 1558-7975
Print Issn: 0888-7993
2022
Accounting Horizons (2022)
Citation
Matt Bjornsen, Bryan G. Brockbank, Jaclyn Prentice; The Effect of Analyst Conservatism on Meeting the Consensus via Earnings Management. Accounting Horizons 2022; https://doi.org/10.2308/HORIZONS-2020-107
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