Abstract

We examine whether analysts who supplement their earnings forecasts with more accurate cash flow forecasts generate more profitable recommendations. Previous research using consensus cash flow forecasts, or the issuance of cash flow forecasts fails to document a significant relation between analysts’ cash flow forecasts and their stock recommendation performance. We argue that analysts’ cash flow forecasts differ in quality and hypothesize that the relative accuracy of an individual analyst’s cash flow forecasts is positively associated with the profitability of that analyst’s stock recommendations. We find that when analysts issue both earnings and cash flow forecasts for a firm, cash flow forecast accuracy predicts stock recommendation profitability even after controlling for earnings forecast accuracy. Our findings are robust to the use of instrumental variables and the use of recommendation change in the analysis. Whether analysts also issue sales forecasts and/or long-term growth forecasts does not affect the results.

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