Title

Is Real Earnings Smoothing Harmful? Evidence From Firm-Specific Stock Price Crash Risk

Publication Date

12-22-2017

Abstract

This study examines whether and when real earnings smoothing influences firm-specific stock price crash risk. Using a sample of U.S. public firms for the years 1993 through 2014, we find real earnings smoothing to be positively associated with firm-specific stock price crash risk. This finding is consistent with the view that real earnings smoothing helps managers withhold bad news, keep poor-performing projects, conceal resource diversion, and engage in ineffective risk management, which increases crash risk. Further, we find a stronger relation between crash risk and real earnings smoothing when firm uncertainty is higher, product market competition is lower, and balance sheet constraint is higher. Overall, our study suggests that real earnings smoothing destroys shareholder value in that it increases stock price crash risk.

Publication Title

Contemporary Accounting Research

First Page

n/a

Last Page

n/a

DOI

10.1111/1911-3846.12353

Publisher Policy

pre print

This document is currently not available here.

Find in your library

Share

COinS