Abstract:
The seminal market efficiency paradigm in finance is being increasingly challenged
by evidence apparently inconsistent with its predictions. Such "anomalies" tend to
show that the market does not fully incorporate information upon its release in an
unbiased way. Recent literature in finance identifies two potential types of anomalous
market reaction to news disclosuresl overreaction, and underreaction. The
overreaction phenomenon does not find much empirical support but market
underreaction, on the other hand, appears quite robust, particularly in the case of bad
news which the market appears to take time to process in many situations. My PhD
explores these issues.
The first part of my thesis tests the hypothesis that if investors rationally incorporate
new pessimistic (optimistic) information then after controlling for risk, bad (good)
news firms will not under- (over-) react. I test this hypothesis in the going-concern
modified audit report disclosure domain. Going-concern opinions offer an appropriate
test for the underreaction model as such information releases are associated with acute
psychological stress and where a clear distinction between bad and good news can
easily be made by considering the parallel case of going-concern withdrawal events.
The second part of my thesis extends my work to investigate the market underreaction
phenomenon conditional on the underlying bankruptcy regime of the institutional
environment. Specifically, I explore the market response to the information content of
closely related going-concem modified audit report disclosures (bad news)
conditional on the underlying bankruptcy codes in very similar institutional and
market environments differing only in the nature of bankruptcy regimes. More
specifically, I work with the debtor-friendly U. S. and the creditor- friendly U. K. legal
regimes. I hypothesize that investors in a creditor-friendly bankruptcy regime (the
U. K. ) will react more adversely to the publication of first-time going-concem
modified audit report indicating increased risk of loss than do investors in a debtor-
friendly bankruptcy regime (the U. S. ). This is because of a remarkable divergence
across the bankruptcy codes of the two different countries with regards to the rights of
claimholders in the event of a default on debt contracts. The idea is to test whether
there is any difference in investor response to similar bad news signals highlighting
financial distress across different institutional environments.
In the first part of my thesis, I find that there is asymmetric market response to first-
time going-concern modified audit report disclosures (bad news) and withdrawal of
the going-concern modified audit report disclosure (good news). Using a large sample
of 845 U. S. firms from 1994-2002,1 find that the market underreacts to going-concern
modified audit report disclosures (bad news), resulting in a downward drift of around
-16% over the one-year period subsequent to the publication of going-concern
modified audit opinion, but treats its withdrawal (good news) consistent with theory
with no subsequent abnormal returns. To ensure that my empirical results are robust I
employ various methodologies and also conduct additional tests to control for
alternative explanations to my market underreaction story such as post-earnings
announcement drift, momentum etc. My main results on market underreaction to
going-concern modified audit report disclosures remain unchanged. I also test if there
is an opportunity to eam profits by trading on this underreaction anomaly but find that
any profit opportunity is illusory and highly risky. I conduct additional analyses that explore the trading behaviour of different classes of investors in my sample firms.
This analysis is important as it could highlight whether institutional investors and
retail investors exhibit similar trading biases. Results reveal that institutional investors
reduce their holdings in such stocks on a timely basis in contrast to retail investors
who appear to increase their holdings in such distressed stocks. The evidence is even
clearer when such analysis is conducted by splitting my going-concern sample by
subsequent outcomes.
I conclude that de. spite clear adverse signals about the firm's continuing financial
viability being conveyed to investors by the publication of the going-concem
modified audit report, this information is not being fully impounded by the market, in
contrast to the good news conveyed by going-concern withdrawals. My findings add
to the existing literature calling into question the ability of the market to rationally
price stocks in the case of acute public-domain bad news disclosures, as opposed to
good news releases. My results suggest that my evidence of stock mispricing and
extended post-goi ng-c once rn drift might then be explained by a limits to arbitrage
argument with naYve (retail) investors keeping stock prices artificially high by trading
inappropriately in these stocks due to behavioural biases identified in the literature
and skilled investors (professional arbitrageurs) having limited incentive to trade in
these small firms because of high costs.
In terms of the second main theme of my thesis, my empirical analysis comparing the
market response to going-concern modified opinions in the U. S. and the U. K. shows
that, as hypothesized, investors in a creditor-friendly regime (the U. K. ) react more
adversely, -3
1 %, than investors in a debtor-friendly
regime (the U. S. ),
-
18%, in the
eight year time-period (1995-2002). One particular reason is that the U. S. bankruptcy
regime is biased more towards the rights of' debtors, whereas the U. K. regime is
biased more towards the rights of creditors and once a firrn enters bankruptcy
proceedings in the U. K., it is unlikely that stockholders' equity has any residual value.
These results provide evidence of the important role of legal regimes on the
informativeness of accounting inforination. My results suggest that as standard-setters
pursue uniform accounting and auditing standards across the world, they need to take
into account how such standards interact with local legal regimes and consequently
their informativeness to investors and other financial statement users. As such, these
results present crucial empirical evidence that adds to the ongoing debate about the
relevance of global standards among standard- setters, regulators and academics.
Overall, my thesis makes important theoretical and empirical contributions to the
behavioural finance, market pricing, and accounting literature in the bad news
disclosure domain.