Abstract
This study examines how the quality of corporate disclosures impacts the precision of information that financial analysts incorporate into their forecasts of annual earnings. Our empirical measures distinguish between individual analysts' common and idiosyncratic (uniquely private) information precision, and between the quality of firms' public disclosures and the quality of their private communications with analysts. We find that higher quality disclosures increase the precision of analysts' commonand idiosyncratic information. Further, we find that the increased precision of analysts' idiosyncratic information is primarily due to higher quality annual and quarterly accounting-related disclosures, publicly available to all investors. These results suggest that higher-quality public information better enables analysts to generate idiosyncratic insights. We find no evidence to suggest that the quality of analysts' private communications with management impacts analysts' information precision after controlling for the quality of publicly available accounting information. In sum, the results suggest that when forming their annual earnings forecasts, analysts rely more heavily on publicly available financial data rather than privileged communications with management.
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