Abstract

PurposeThe study aims at investigating the impact of real earnings management (REM) on the cross-sectional stock return after considering the moderating role of market effect, size effect, value effect and momentum effect.Design/methodology/approachThe study uses weekly and monthly data of 3,085 Bombay Stock Exchange listed stocks spanning over twenty years, from January 2000 to December 2019. REM is measured through metrics developed by Roychowdhury (2006), namely, abnormal levels of operating cash flows, production costs and discretionary expenditure. The study employs univariate and bivariate portfolio-level analysis.FindingsThe findings deduced from the empirical results demonstrate that investors perceive downward REM as an element of risk; hence, they discount the stock prices at a higher rate. On the contrary, results show that investors positively perceive upward REM; hence, they hold the stocks even at a lower rate of return. This anomaly is found to be robust for all kinds of considered moderations.Practical implicationsThe findings have important managerial implications as investors are found to assign different weights to different forms of REM, depending upon the perception regarding the magnitude of risk involved in different forms. Managers can accommodate this information during their short- and long-term corporate planning.Originality/valueFirst, the study is among the earlier attempts to examine the association between REM and stock returns by considering the moderating role of cross-sectional effects. Second, the study considers the direction and endogenous nature of REM while investigating the issue.

Highlights

  • Earnings management is one of the contemporary issues in accounting research

  • Though the excess portfolio returns are consistent with the well-established value effect, their documented N-P spread across the different sorts of B/M portfolios is positive and significant, demonstrating a robust real earnings management (REM) anomaly

  • The study aims to examine the association between REM and stock returns by considering the direction and endogeneity nature of REM

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Summary

Introduction

Earnings management is one of the contemporary issues in accounting research. It refers to a practice under which managers manipulate the earnings to mislead some stakeholders toward the firm’s underlying economic performance or fulfill their contractual obligations that depend upon reported earnings (Healy and Wahlen, 1999). The obtained one-month-ahead portfolio excess returns are regressed to Carhart’s (1997) four-factor asset pricing model to assess the actual effect of REM on Indian stock returns after controlling cross-sectional effects prevalent in the equity market. We form bivariate sorted portfolios to disentangle and control the effect of various variables such as market risk, size effect, value effect and momentum strategy in the cross-sections of stock returns.

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