Accountancy: Faculty Publications
Analyst Revenue Forecasts and Firm Revenue Misstatements
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2023
Publication Title
European Accounting Review
DOI
10.1080/09638180.2021.1983447
Abstract
Earnings and revenue are ranked as the two most important performance measures reported to outsiders. However, prior literature primarily focuses on management’s incentives and willingness to manipulate earnings to meet earnings benchmarks. Increasingly, analysts are releasing forecasts of financial items in addition to aggregate earnings, with revenue forecasts being the most common. We posit that management may be under similar pressure to meet revenue forecasts given their impact on firm value. As such, we examine whether analyst revenue forecasts aggravate revenue misstatements. We find that revenue misstatements are positively associated with revenue forecasts and the association is more pronounced when beating revenue forecasts is more important. We also show that several characteristics of revenue forecasts aggravate management pressure and thus the likelihood of revenue misstatements. Further analyses suggest that firms use accruals management rather than real earnings management to inflate reported revenue. Our findings may be useful to academics, investors, and regulators in examining the relationship between analyst revenue forecasts and firms’ financial reporting behavior.
Recommended Citation
Huang, Ting Chiao, Stephanie Hairston.
2023.
"Analyst Revenue Forecasts and Firm Revenue Misstatements."
European Accounting Review, 32 (2): 379-414.
doi: 10.1080/09638180.2021.1983447
https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/account-facpubs/191
Copyright
Publisher Copyright: © 2021 European Accounting Association.
Comments
Publisher Copyright: © 2021 European Accounting Association.