2013
DOI: 10.1007/s11156-012-0330-z
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To beat or not to beat? The importance of analysts’ cash flow forecasts

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Cited by 36 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…More importantly, we provide evidence that analysts make meaningful accrual adjustments when deriving their cash flow forecasts. Thus, our study lends support to and reinforces the inferences of the majority of existing studies that suggest analysts' cash flow forecasts are sophisticated and useful to investors (e.g., DeFond and Hung ; Call et al ; McInnis and Collins ; Brown et al ; Pae and Yoon ; Yoo and Pae ).…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 86%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…More importantly, we provide evidence that analysts make meaningful accrual adjustments when deriving their cash flow forecasts. Thus, our study lends support to and reinforces the inferences of the majority of existing studies that suggest analysts' cash flow forecasts are sophisticated and useful to investors (e.g., DeFond and Hung ; Call et al ; McInnis and Collins ; Brown et al ; Pae and Yoon ; Yoo and Pae ).…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 86%
“…Research on analysts' cash flow forecasts began with DeFond and Hung's examination of the determinants of market participants' demand for cash flow forecasts. Since then, researchers have studied other related issues, including the determinants of analysts' supply of cash flow forecasts (Ertimur and Stubben ), the impact of cash flow forecasts on managers' reporting and investors' pricing of earnings (McInnis and Collins ; Call ), relative earnings forecast accuracy in the presence of cash flow forecasts (Call, Chen, and Tong ), the reaction to meeting or beating analysts' cash flow forecasts (Brown, Huang, and Pinello ), and the determinants of cash flow forecast accuracy (Pae and Yoon ; Yoo and Pae ). While the above studies indirectly suggest analysts' cash flow forecasts are meaningful to investors and assist analysts themselves in forecasting earnings, an important study by Givoly, Hayn, and Lehavy (hereafter GHL) concludes that analysts' cash flow forecasts lack sophistication in that analysts appear to derive their cash flow forecasts by simply adding depreciation and amortization expense back to their own earnings forecasts.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Early research investigated the determinants of investors’ demand for cash flow forecasts (DeFond and Hung ) and the effect of weak investor protection on cash flow forecast disclosure around the world (DeFond and Hung ). Later research has examined the effect of cash flow forecasts on managers’ earnings reporting (McInnis and Collins ), cash flow forecast availability and analyst earnings‐forecasts accuracy (Call et al ), the market reaction to firms meeting or beating analysts’ cash flow forecasts (Brown et al ), the determinants of cash flow forecast accuracy (Pae and Yoon ), and the relation between earnings quality and analysts’ decisions to issue cash flow forecasts (Bilinski ). Despite the considerable focus on analyst cash flow forecasts in the recent literature, there is a lack of information on their usefulness for the ultimate output of analyst research, that is, their valuations in the form of target prices.…”
Section: Research Hypothesesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“… We do not examine the incentive to meet‐or‐beat analysts' cash flow forecasts (Brown et al ), or whether optimistic vs. pessimistic cash flow forecasts are more likely to encourage tax avoidance.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%