Abstract

This paper examines the asset pricing implication of loan loss provisions (LLP). LLP is a bank’s dominant accrual and a key determinant of informativeness of banks’ financial reports. We find banks with low LLP have significantly higher returns than banks with high-LLP. A long-short investment strategy that buys stocks in the lowest LLP portfolio and sells in the highest LLP portfolio earns statistically significant alpha of 97 basis points per month. The predictive power of LLP is prevalent after controlling for size and bank capital. Further analyses suggest the effect of LLP arises because investors do not fully understand information on LLP, which leads to mispricing.

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