2
2
2
Introduction
A decade and a half of the most concerted and ambitious research
effort in accounting history is evaluated here. It is the search into the
relationship between pubUcly disclosed accounting information and the
consequences of the use of this information by the major group of users—
equity investors—as such consequences are reflected in characteristics of
common stocks traded in major exchanges. This research effort, known
as "market-based accounting research" {MBAR), obtained its impetus
from major developments in finance theory during the late 1950s and
early 1960s. These were the portfoUo selection theory and its offspring,
the capital asset pricing model {CAPM); and the concept of information-
aUy efficient capital markets {ECM). Subsequent developments in infor-
mation economics, agency theory, and optimal incentive-signaUng models
were quickly incorporated into MBAR. While the impetus to this Une of
research came from other disciplines, accounting was not only a benefi-
ciary but also, to a modest extent, a benefactor. MBAR is relevant to the
study of capital market efficiency, the CAPM, information economics,
and regulation. This contribution distinguishes MBAR from most ac-
counting areas, whose contributions to other disciplines are negUgible. In
to provide the missing link and establish a coherent program for financial
accounting research. The effect of this program on accounting research
cannot be exaggerated; during the past decade and a half, studies based
on capital market theories and data occupied the center stage of account-
ing research.'
The link provided by capital market theories connects the accounting
information system to its function in capital markets. Information has a
dual role in these markets. First, it aids in establishing a set of equiUbrium
security prices that affects the aUocation of "real" resources and the
productive decisions implemented by firms. Second, it enables individuals
to exchange claims to present and future consumption across different
states, thereby attaining both preferred pattems of lifetime consumption
and the sharing of societal risks. This expUcit conceptualization of the
role of information in capital markets appears to provide the elusive
operational framework for the systematic analysis of altemative account-
ing information systems. The outcome of the economic system, as a
function of the information system, can now be anjilyzed. The accounting
research issue therefore becomes less one of identifying the "uniquely
correct" concept of usefulness than of investigating whatever dimension
of usefulness is contextuaUy relevant or interesting. In any event, the
crucial observation is that impUcations of different infonnation systems
rest ultimately on their effects on the uncertain state-contingent multi-
period consumption pattems of individuals, where the pattems are de-
termined and induced by prices which in tum reflect individual beUefs
about the Ukelihood of altemative occurrences.
The three key ingredients of this framework—information, prices and
other market variables, and expected utiUties of contingent consumption
pattems—were, of course, not entirely new even in the eaily 1960s.
However, the lure of capital market theories lay in the possibUity of
obtaining a systematic integration of these three ingredients. Such inte-
gration pointed to a weU-specified and operational agenda for financial
accounting research. The foUowing quotations from the security-price
section of the 1972 Report of the American Accounting Association
Committee on Research Methodology in Accounting, written by Beaver
[1972], capture the essence of the potential research agenda.
First, given capital market efficiency, the information content of
accounting data can be inferred by observing stock-price and vohune
reaction to announcements of these data:
Knowledge of the association between altemative accounting measurements and security
prices is an essential part of knowledge of what information is impounded in security prices,
, , , It is also likely to be important for specifying how prices would change (if at all) as the
[information] system is altered, [1972, p, 427]
' The significant impact of capital market theories was, of course, not restricted to
accounting. It also had a profound effect on economic research which, up to the 1950s,
largely ignored the financial markets, focusing on reed markets. Pioneering research such as
Tobin [1958], Diamond [1967], and Radner [1968] established the link between financial
and real markets in economic theory.
MARKET-BASED RESEARCH IN ACCOUNTING 253
' The potential policy implications of finance theories and empirical evidence for the
FASB were elaborated in Beaver [1973],
254 B. LEV AND J. A. OHLSON
' The extent of optinusm is, of course, difficult to evaluate in any precise terms. However,
the optimism can be inferred from the fact that Beaver's [1972] article was influential and
appears to have had a substantial impact on attitudes within the accounting research
community,
* For example, Dyckman, Downes, and Magee [1975, p, 87] note: "Too often theoretical
developments and empirical testing go their independent ways..,, From thiB viewpoint the
efficient market research thread is more complete than most other research methodologies."
MARKET-BASED RESEARCH IN ACCOUNTING 255
' Gonedes and Dopuch [1974, p, 117] note: "But, in the end it [the FASB] is a political
institution (nominally under private sector control). Consequently, the actions of this (and
any similar) organization should be viewed as political outcomes, rather than as outcomes
of a process that is supposed to operationalize and implement an accounting theory in a
pure and pristine manner,"
MARKET-BASED RESEARCH IN ACCOUNTING 257
search is presented in another study in this issue (BaU and Foster [1982]).
More important, we have decided against emphasizing experimental
design issues because considerable methodological improvement is evi-
dent in recent MBAR. Most researchers currently appear to be aware of
and account for general experimental design problems, such as those
arising from sample nonrandomization and cross-sectional correlation of
the data. More care is taken in the choice of appropriate statistical
significance tests and in recognizing the limitations of underlying models,
such as the CAPM. New data sets (e.g., intraday stock prices) and a more
exact identification of disclosure timing improve the signal-to-noise ratio
and thereby the probabiUty of detecting a market reaction to information
release. Furthermore, some of the basic findings, such as the stock-price
reaction to eamings announcements (section 2.1.1) or the nonreaction of
stock prices to the release of replacement-cost data (section 2.3.8), appear
to be rather robust across experimental designs. It does therefore seem
superfluous to elaborate on the methodology of the specific studies
mentioned in the foUowing sections.
Similar comments are appUcable to various "research technologies"
that have recently attracted considerable attention in the accounting
Uterature. Among these are the discussions of the API metric: MarshaU
[1975], PateU [1979], Ohlson [1978; 19796], and Livnat [1981]; econometric
issues in market-based studies: Beaver [19816]; certain aspects of the
maintained hypotheses of market efficiency and the CAPM: BaU [1978]
and Beaver [1981a]; pitfalls in regulation research (with particular ref-
erence to the oU and gas studies): Foster [1980]; and studies on the
performance and statistical power of the "market model": Brown and
Warner [1980]. Nevertheless, numerous methodological comments of a
general nature wiU be made in the foUowing sections. In short, we have
chosen to emphasize the evaluation of research objectives, and the
interpretations and impUcations of findings, rather than experimental
design issues, because the former involve subtle issues which are seldom
discussed systematicaUy in the accounting Uterature.
"This might be due to the existence of more timely signals, both accounting (e,g,,
quarterly reports) and nonaccounting, and/or to the speciflc eamings forecast model
employed,
'" This interpretation involves some subtle issues which have not received the attention
they deserve, A complete theoretical analysis is provided in Patell [1979],
260 B. LEV AND J. A. OHLSON
Clarke, and Wright [1979] reported that the ranking of 25 NYSE port-
foUos on the basis of percentage change in unexpected EPSs was highly
correlated with the ranking of portfolios on the basis of residual stock
returns.
The BaU-Brown methodology has been used in numerous related
contexts, such as quarterly eamings reports (e.g.. Brown and KenneUy
[1972] and Foster [1977a], the latter using Box-Jenkins expectation
models), and non-NYSE stocks (e.g., Foster [1975] on over-the-counter
(OTC) insurance companies; Brown [1970] on the Australian stock mar-
ket; Firth [1976] on British stocks; and Deakin, Norwood and Smith
[1974] on the Tokyo exchange). AU confirm the existence of a statisticaUy
significant association between unexpected eamings and residual stock
returns.
Whereas the studies so far discussed examined the association between
eamings announcements and the mean of the (unexpected) retum distri-
bution, an altemative methodology focused on another property of the
retum distribution—the variance of residual returns. SpecificaUy, the
residual retum variance during the announcement period was compared
with the average retum variance in the pre- and post(non)annoucement
periods to determine whether they are drawn from the same distribution.
This methodology was first appUed by Beaver [1968] in the examination
of annual eamings announcements. Similar approaches have been em-
ployed in other contexts, for example, by May [1971] in an examination
of AMEX quarterly eamings, Hagerman [1973] in OTC bank stocks, and
McNichols and Manegold [1982] on stock market data from the pre- and
postquarterly report regulation. The variance tests have also been appUed
to more finely partitioned retum data. Morse [1981], using daily data,
obtained results similar to those of Beaver [1968]. PateU and Wolfson
[1981], examining intraday (transaction by transaction) stock prices,
reported a statisticaUy significant change in the retum variance at the
time of quarterly eamings announcements. They further observed that
the regular pattern of negatively seriaUy correlated intraday returns is
"interrupted" at the time of eamings announcements. These and similar
studies found the price variance during the announcement period to be
significantly larger than the average variance in the nonannouncement
period, a finding consistent with the hypothesis that eamings data convey
new information to the market. ^^ More precisely, after (generaUy) con-
troUing for market-wide price movements and averaging over different
announcement periods, a causal link was made between the disclosure
event and the observed shift in the mean or variance of the retum
distribution. This again iUustrates that one can view announcements as
a treatment effect and analyze any dimension of the retum distribution.
A statistical effect is then interpreted as evidence of information content.
" An exception to these findings is reported by Lev and Yahalomi [1972] for the Israeli
stock exchange, where the nonreaction of stock prices to eamings announcements was
attributed to unique capital market imperfections.
MARKET-BASED RESEARCH IN ACCOUNTING 261
State that such "information-content" studies are among the most im-
portant in empirical accounting research. In addition to this positive
finding, two important methodological/conceptual innovations emanat-
ing from "information content" research can be included under the
heading of "good news." First, the aforementioned studies have aU
evolved under the conceptual presumption of rational anticipations,
which requires a consideration of what is expected in the financial
markets. Thus, the BaU-Brown study emphasized that one must model
both expected returns and expected eamings. The investigation of eam-
ings expectation models has been extended in various promising direc-
tions (e.g., time-series anfdysis). Second, and this is reaUy an extension of
the previous point, there is no reason to expect an effect of eamings (or
other information) on the retum distribution foUowing the announcement
date. This contention, the informational efficiency hypothesis, is com-
monly used as a maintained hypothesis when experiments of information
content are conducted. The operational presumption is that the market
reaction to an informational item occurs prior to (in anticipation of) and/
or concurrent with its pubUc announcement date. Less appreciated is the
fact that informational efficiency is only a sufficient condition in the
context of information-content analysis. One cannot conclude from the
presence of pre- (or contemporaneous) announcement effects and the
absence of postannouncement effects that the market is informationaUy
efficient. The standard jargon often suggests that such evidence is
"consistent with" informationed efficiency; even so, "consistent with" is
certainly not equivalent to the much stronger "impUes." The test designs
for informational efficiency are more demanding; section 2.4.1 considers
some of these issues. In any event, the central role of rational anticipations
and informational efficiency in the evolution of empirical accounting
research is difficult to overstate.
There is also some "bad news" alongside the "good news." First, and
perhaps most important, the interpretations of the "event-study" findings
are far from obvious. While the term "usefulness" of infonnation was
used rather liberaUy in many early studies, upon reflection it is clear that
to move from the existence of contemporaneous statistical associations
to statements of "usefulness" is nontrivial. This is certainly the case if
"usefulness" is to be related to concepts of social utiUty. The problem
here is related to the difference between necessity and sufficiency. To the
extent one views a positive information-content finding as a necessary
condition for positive social value there are few problems. Information
content is simply regarded as evidence that the examined accounting
data have been used (revised beliefs); otherwise there would have been
no reaction of the market variables. The use of infonnation is clearly a
necessary condition for social value, no matter how the latter is (reason-
ably) defined. Establishing information-content evidence as a sufficient
condition for social value is a much subtler problem. At a minimum, one
must consider carefuUy the precise meaning of usefulness and the mech-
MARKET-BASED RESEARCH IN ACCOUNTING 263
"A related issue which had recently received some initial attention is the observed
cross-sectional differences in the retum reaction to eamings announcements. Why do some
stocks react to eamings disclosures more than others? Is this due to the existence of more
information prior to the eamings announcement? If so, what are the economic circimistances
triggering differential effects? Is it related to the exchange in which the stocks are traded
and/or to insiders' market activities? For initial research on this issue, see Grant [1980],
Atiase [1980], Finnerty [1976a; 1976ft], and Penman [1982a],
" This problem is aggravated in the absence of a well-specified theory relating accounting
data to parameters of security prices. Inferences in this case rely purely on the extent of
observed associations. Also, when research results are evaluated, the impossibility of
"perfectly controlled experiments" in MBAR should constantly be kept in mind.
264 B. LEV AND J. A. OHLSON
" There is indirect evidence on the importance of noneamings data from bankruptcy
and bond-ratings prediction models, (For a review of this work, see Ball and Foster
[1982],)
266 B. LEV AND J. A. OHLSON
" This is known as the "naive investor" or "functional fixation" hypothesis. Allegations
about managers' ability to affect stock prices by judicious choices of accounting techniques
appear frequently in both the academic and business press. See, for example, Briloff [1972;
1976].
MARKET-BASED RESEARCH IN ACCOUNTING 267
Archibald [1967; 1972] examined the stock prices of firms that switched
firom accelerated to straight-line depreciation (without changing their
tax-accounting method) and concluded that no significant price reaction
occurred during the month of earnings announcement (even though the
accounting change increased reported earnings by about 10 percent).^
Kaplan and Roll [1972] examined firms switching from accelerated to
straight-line depreciation and firms switching from deferral to flow-
through accounting for the investment tax credit. Both changes improve
reported earnings but have no direct tax consequences. Somewhat sur-
prisingly, they found that the returns of the depreciation-switching firms
fared worse than the market average during the 30 weeks following the
earnings announcements. For the firms switching to the flow-through
method from the deferral method, a temporary increase in price occurred
at the earnings announcement date. However, during the 30 weeks after
the announcement, the switching firms' stocks fared worse than those of
firms that did not switch. Nevertheless, the overall conclusion of Kaplan
and Roll was that investors were not "fooled" by the switches in account-
ing techniques. Cassidy [1976], using a different methodology and data,
confirmed the negative stock performance for the investment tax credit
case.
Ball [1972] examined 430 cases of accounting changes, some having
cash-flow effects and others not, and concluded that investors were able
to distinguish between the real and "cosmetic" effects of accounting
changes on earnings. Harrison [1977; 1978] compared the market perfor-
mance of firms making discretionary as well as nondiscretionary accoxmt-
ing changes with the performance of similar firms that made no account-
ing changes. One striking finding was that firms which made discretionary
changes resulting in earnings (but presumably not cash-flow) increases
experienced returns below those of the control group.^' Moreover, differ-
ential security rates of returns between the two samples persisted beyond
the disclosure date of the accounting change. Note that both of these
findings are similar to those of Kaplan and RoU [1972]. A somewhat
disturbing feature of the Ball and Harrison studies mentioned above is
^ For completion sake, we should mention here several efirly studies on the market
impact of alternative depreciation and investment tax credit techniques: O'Donnell [1965],
Mlynarczyk [1969], and Comiskey [1971], These authors have employed certainty-based
stock valuation models (e,g,, the earnings capitalization model and the P/E formula), rather
than the more popular (and less restrictive) method of observing price reaction to accounting
changes. Although the unanimous conclusion of these studies was that the market did not
react naively to differences in accounting methods, it was not always consistent with the
data. For example, Mlynarczyk's findings appear to indicate that investors did not adjust to
accounting differences in the first two years after the change. The small samples employed
and the certainty-based stock valuation models mitigate against making inferences from
the findings of these studies,
" Again, note that if firms experiencing unexpected profit decreases or even losses tend
to select income-increasing accounting techniques, then such an observed negative market
reaction might be associated with the fortunes of the firms rather than with the accounting
changes. This is a reflection of the possible selection bias discussed above.
MARKET-BASED RESEARCH IN ACCOUNTING 269
^ Subsequent to the change the residual retums did not exhibit a discernible pattern,
except for a large negative average residual in the reporting month, which still awaits
adequate explanation. It should also be noted that a systematic risk (P) shift occurred for
the L/FO-switching firms.
270 B. LEV AND J. A. OHLSON
Ricks [19826], controlling for the fact that L/FO-adopting firms generally
exhibited unusual earnings increases during the examined period (1974-
75)—a point Sunder did not control for—found that the LIFO-adopting
firms experienced significantly lower residual returns than a control group
during the month of the change announcement. Moreover, Ricks found
that when earnings of LIFO firms were adjusted to a FIFO basis, the
postswitch P/E-r&tios of LIFO firms were lower than those of the control
group. (The FIFO data were derived from the footnotes in the annual
reports; this procedure was not feasible at the time of Sunder's study.)
Similarly, Brown [1980] reported results consistent with Ricks'—an ad-
verse market reaction for the L/FO-switching firms.
The post-Sunder LIFO-switch studies are discomfiting for a number of
reasons. First, the results, taken at face value, are not consistent with the
notion of investor rationality that is traditionally used as a maintained
hypothesis. This is disturbing because there are no behavioral alternatives
to rationality; concepts of "bounded rationality" have never proved to be
particularly useful in economic theory. Hence, one is at a loss to provide
a theoretical explanation of subsequent LIFO results. Second, the impres-
sion left is that much of the early work testing investor rationality simply
was not powerful enough to reject the smooth and attractive rationality
hypothesis. Curiously enough, sufficiently crude econometric techniques
(and crude or incomplete data) are almost sure to accept the expected
conclusion, that is, the null hypothesis of no reaction. Much the same
applies to tests of the efficient market hjrpothesis in general, as evidenced,
for example, in the discussion of market "anomalies" in the June/Septem-
ber 1978 issue of the Journal of Financial Economics (see also section
2.4.1). This suggests that more powerful experimental designs might
reject previously well-established conclusions, such as those in the Beaver
and Dukes [1973] study on the market's rational adjustments to alter-
native methods of depreciation. This seems to be an interesting area for
further work. Indeed, the L/FO-switch issue appears to be still unfolding.
In a recent study, Biddle and Lindahl [1982] sharpened the research
focus by examining the association between residual stock returns and
the realized tax savings due to the LIFO switch, rather than merely
examining market reaction to the accounting switch. In addition, unex-
pected earnings were controlled for, as in the Ricks [19826] study. With
some exceptions, results seem to indicate a positive association between
residual stock returns and LIFO tax savings; this is consistent with
investor rationality.
Finally, is the cash-flow versus non-cash-flow dichotomy underlying
the above research useful beyond a first-order approximation? The LIFO-
adoption studies, for example, have demonstrated that the decision to
switch accounting methods is most likely nonrandom, even beyond the
tax consequences. This suggests that there might always be cash-flow
effects (not necessarily pertaining to taxes) of every managerial decision,
including the choice of accounting method. Accordingly, the somewhat
MARKET-BASED RESEARCH IN ACCOUNTING 271
^ For example, Hagerman and Zmijewski [1979] reported that the choice of accounting
techniques is related to firm size and management compensation plans. Jarrell [1979]
argued that utility managers use accounting techniques to revalue upward the asset base
used in the rate-setting process, DhaUwal [1980] reported that the choice between the "ftiU
cost" and "'successful efforte" methods for oil and gas exploration is related to the firms'
capital structure, which in turn may affect indentures in firms' loan agreements.
272 B. LEV AND J. A. OHLSON
" Of course, this line of reasoning begs the issue as to why the possibility of accounting
switches is not prohibited in the covenant itself.
^ The obvious motive—increasing future cash flows via tax savings—does not need any
elaboration here. For an empirical study on the choice of inventory methods to maximize
tax savings, see Biddle [1980].
MARKET-BASED RESEARCH IN ACCOUNTING 273
open is whether, and at what speed, investors can adjust for subtler
differences in accounting practices that are only partially disclosed, such
as the different assumptions firms can make in estimating pension liabil-
ities, accounting for contractual projects, or the extent of capitalizing
overhead costs (absorption costing).
The evidence on accounting changes, while indicating some ability of
investors to distinguish substantive from nonsubstantive changes, is
marred by surprises. (Strangely enough, some still insist on referring to
them as anomalies.) On the whole, the evidence is consistent with a
multitude of hypotheses, none of which can at this stage be either
reasonably substantiated or entirely ruled out. For example, the market
reaction observed to the disclosure of accounting changes having no
direct cash-flow effects (e.g., Kaplan and Roll [1972]) may indicate that
such changes provide substantive signals about management attitudes
and behavior and about the economic characteristics (e.g., profitability)
of the firm. Here, as in many other cases, self-selection bias is not only a
possibility but is also often consistent with empirical results. For example,
the firms that switched to a less conservative accounting method in the
Kaplan-RoU study had, on average, poor earnings records prior to the
switch (which helped increase earnings). Accordingly, the observed mar-
ket reaction could have been due to the profitability performance of the
firms rather than to the accounting change. Yet another alternative
hypothesis, the observed negative market reaction to accounting changes
that merely increase reported earnings (e.g., Harrison [1977; 1978]), might
suggest that investors are wary of accounting manipulations and are
willing to pay a "premium" for conservative measurement techniques.^
FinsiUy, despite obvious reluctance to admit that the "functional fixation"
hypothesis could be valid, some of the evidence is not inconsistent with
prices that do not always reflect the implications of publicly available
information and with investors having preferences for nominally high
(and/or less volatile) earnings even at the expense of after-tax cash
flows.^^ Particularly disturbing are the post-Sunder findings on the mar-
ket reaction to LIFO adoptions (e.g.. Ricks [19826]). However, the recent
broadening of the scope of analysis to include management motives for
selecting accounting techniques and the examination of various indirect
effects due to contractual arrangements add an important dimension to
the examination of accounting-choice consequences. Despite the initial
mixed results and various methodological difficulties, this Une of research
should be continued as a complement to investigations of the "functional
fixation" hypothesis. As elaborated above, the preferred direction seems
^* More on this argument in Fabozzi [1978] and Hawkins and Campbell [1978].
^ Consider the following comment from the (October 7, 1974) Wall Street Journak
"Because of the negative impact on earnings LIFO conversions haven't always been
welcome news to the stock market Also companies worried about a takeover may be
reluctant to risk the kind of downward pressure on stock prices that has greeted other
companies when they recently converted to LIFO,"
MARKET-BASED RESEARCH IN ACCOUNTING 275
^' See also Horwitz and Kolodny [1980] for an overall assessment of the SEC's LOB
regulation, and Twombly [1977] for a study suggesting that the SEC's LOB regulation did
not provide new information to capital markets.
MARKET-BASED RESEARCH IN ACCOUNTING 277
^ See Foster [1980] for a discussion of various methodological issues in these oil and gas
studies.
"^ This study was concerned with Value Line replacement cost estimates.
" A price reaction at the time the regulation became effective might have given some
indication of the market's assessment of the cost of complying with this allegedly expensive
disclosure requirement.
** For elaboration on the firm-size effect in this context, see Freeman [1981].
278 B. LEV AND J. A. OHLSON
^ This hypothesis is consistent with the findings of Easman et al, [19791, indicating a
stronger correlation between stock prices and replacement-cost-adjusted eamings than
between stock prices and historical-cost earnings, Baran, Lakonishok, and Ofer [19S0]
provide evidence that association between market betas and general price-level-a^justed
(accounting) betas is significantly higher than those observed between market and histori-
cal-cost betas,
^^ See Watts and Zimmerman [1980] for a detailed discussion of some of these findings
with particular attention to the cost/benefit issue of ASR No, 190,
^ Note that this methodology does not require ex ante specification of the direction and
magnitude of price reaction on individual firms, as is required, for example, in the BaU and
Brown [1968] methodology. This is similar to the variance tesU (Beaver [1968]) that also
circumvent the directional exogenous expectations model requirement,
^ For a methodological criticism of Noreen and Sepe's "correlation-based approach," see
Basu's [1981a] comment and Noreen and Sepe's reply [1981fr],
MARKET-BASED RESEARCH IN ACCOUNTING 279
*° However, see Abdel-khalik, Thompson, and Taylor [1978] for a discussion of the
economic effects of FAS No. 13 on managerial decisions of lessee and lessor companies.
Apparently the regulation affected various financial and investment decisions.
MARKET-BASED RESEARCH IN ACCOUNTING 281
" For whether this regulation affected managements' R & D decisions, see the conflicting
findings of Dukes, Dyckman, and EUiott [1980] and Horwitz and Kolodny [1980], The
former failed to detect an adverse effect of FAS No, 2 on real R & D outlays by firms, while
the latter, using a questionnaire study, concluded that the regulation caused a relative
decline in R & D outlays of small, high-technology firms. Collins [1978] reported a possibly
weak effect of FAS No, 2 on managerial R & D decisions.
282 B. LEV AND J. A. OHLSON
" Some will probably argue that this demand for research is partially derived from PR
considerations and the need to "justify" regulatory decisions. While not entirely unreason-
able, the persistence and growth in demand appear to signal substantive interest.
MARKET-BASED RESEARCH IN ACCOUNTING 283
" See Fama's [1970] survey of the ECM hypothesis for a consideration of accounting
information-content studies as corroborating the hypothesis. Compare this to the r«vision-
istic view summarized by Foster [1982] in his recent survey of the ECM literature.
MARKET-BASED RESEARCH IN ACCOUNTING 285
[1977], Watts [1978], Brown [1978], and Joy and Jones [1979.]"" In some
cases, the studies even implied that excess returns could be earned by
using investment strategies based on price-change persistencies subse-
quent to earnings announcements.'*^ Recall that persistent price adjust-
ments after an information release have also been observed in several
studies on the market impact of accounting changes (see sections 2.2.2
and 2.2.3). Curiously and somewhat embarrassingly, even the early Brown
and Kennelly [1972] study, which replicated the Ball and Brown [1968]
study on quarterly earnings data, shows postdisclosure drift in the excess-
returns pattern. Although Brown and Kennelly chose not to discuss and
analyze the matter, (the mean of) postdisclosure drift appears to be
virtually indistinguishable from the predisclosure drift. Protracted price
adjustments to earnings announcements were also reported by Morse
[1981] for both stock exchange and OTC securities. This accumulating
evidence suggests that new information is not impounded in prices
"instantaneously."*®
A related line of research on market efficiency with respect to financial
information focused on the excess returns of portfolios classified by
various firm or stock characteristics. Studies like the well-known Basu
[1977] paper have shown that portfolios comprising low P/.E-ratio stocks,
after adjustment for risk, earn excess returns. And Givoly and Lakonishok
[1979] reported excess returns on portfolios consisting of companies with
a recent upward revision in analysts' earnings forecasts.
Another line of research relevant to market efficiency examined price
reaction to articles in the financial press presumably based on information
in the public domain. For example, Foster [1979] reported on a statisti-
cally significant negative price reaction associated with Briloff's critical
articles in Barrons, and Davies and Canes [1978] reported significant
price reactions to analysts' recommendations reported in the Wall Street
Journal column "Heard on the Street." Oppenheimer and Schlarbaum
[1981] suggested the possibility of earning risk-adjusted excess returns by
following the stock-selection rules provided in the various editions of Ben
Graham's book.
Given such evidence, is the market efficient? As is the case with all
complicated issues, no unequivocal answer can be given. If market effi-
ciency is naively interpreted as prices always reflecting all information in
the public domain (e.g., the entire past sequence of prices, all financial
" It has been suggested by Watts [1978] that some of these seeming market inefficiencies
are period specific. However, Nichols and Brown [1981] do not find a change over time in
this market "inefficiency" with respect to certain unexpected earnings changes,
*^ However, for recent contradicting evidence, see Reinganum [1981],
*" The latter two studies do not, however, suggest that the protracted price adjustments
can be employed practically to develop superior portfolio strategies. Additional "anomalies"
include the "weekend effect" (French [1980]), the "January effect" (RoU [1982]). and the
persistent discounts on closed-ends funds (Thompson [1978]),
286 B. LEV AND J. A. OHLSON
and nonfinancial reports emanating from firms and analysts, all industry-
and economy-wide statistics, etc.), then the market is inefficient with
respect to certain information sources and signals.*^ The evidence, par-
ticularly on the persistence of price adjustments after information disclo-
sure and on price reaction to analyses in the media of information in the
public domain, points to different, more realistic concepts of equilibrium.
Such concepts have been addressed formally by Grossman and Stiglitz
[1976], among others. The key attribute of all these models is that
individuals are not presumed to be equally endowed with information. In
equilibrium, security prices transmit some of the information across
individuals and, in that sense, the less-informed individuals become better
informed. In the extreme, as in Grossman [1978], prices transmit all
information and there is a complete convergence of beliefs where the
market becomes trivially informationally efficient. In more realistic
settings, however, prices do not transmit all information and there is only
partial convergence in beliefs (see, e.g.. Diamond and Verrecchia
[1981]). Accordingly, prices never (even in equilibriiun) fiilly reflect the
global information set. The ambiguous concept of "publicly available
information" plays no role in these notions of equilibrium. It is important
to note that prices do not generally reflect all the information held by the
"informed" investors; this accounts for incentives to acquire and process
information. In somewhat heuristic terms, this suggests that the benefits
from acquiring information and forming superior portfolio strategies will
at the margin (or for the marginal investor) equal the cost of gathering
and converting raw data into useful information.''® In such an environ-
ment, an in-depth and time-consuming analysis of data basically in the
public domain (such as that done by Briloff) can be expected to induce
a price reaction. Furthermore, the fiow of information fi-om the more-
informed to the less-informed investors might be reflected in persistent
price adjustments following disclosure that are consistent with those
observed by Patell and Wolfson [1981].'*^
Neither the ambiguity of the empirical evidence nor the inadequacy of
the more primitive concepts of informational efficiency should oversha-
dow the fact that these concepts, even when they are relatively simplistic,
have played and probably will continue to play an important role in
empirical accounting research. In our view, this role is well deserved,
because it is virtually impossible to design an information-content study,
for example, unless one can assume that the market reaction occurs near
•" It cannot, of course, be entirely ruled out that some of the empirical findings supporting
this statement might be due to the invalidity of the CAPM (a point made by Ball [1978]
and many others) and/or to other methodological problems.
*' A formalization of this line of reasoning is complicated by the possibility of increasing
retum to scale of information processing. This is an inherently unstable situation; see
Wilson [1975],
•" The process of price and volume adjustment to new information is currently extensively
researched on both conceptual and empirical levels. See, for example, Hillmer and Yu
[1979].
MARKET-BASED RESEARCH IN ACCOUNTING 287
'" There are two separate issues here: (i) risk is improperly estimated because the return
on the market-portfolio is improperly measured; or (ti) the Ci4PAf itself is not an empirically
valid characterization of equilibrium. In this context, reference should be made to the
Brown and Warner [1980] study which examined, among other issues, the effects of using
288 B. LEV AND J. A. OHLSON
alternative market indexes and various methods for risk adjustment, A major conclusion
from this study is that ",,, beyond a simple, one-factor market model, there is no evidence
that more complicated methodologies [of risk adjustment] convey any benefit" [1980, p,
249],
MARKET-BASED RESEARCH IN ACCOUNTING 289
" See Lev and Sunder [1979] for a discussion of the methodological issues involved in
this argument about spurious correlation due to a common denominator.
'* For continuation of this controversy, see Gonedes [1975a], who also found the associ-
ation between the two risk measures to be statistically significant, though surprisingly small
compared to other studies.
290 B. LEV AND J. A. OHLSON
" Steps toward the development of such multiperiod models have been made. See, for
example, Myers [1977], Ohlson [1979a; 1979c], Garman and Ohlson [1980], and section 3.2
of this paper.
292 B. LEV AND J. A. OHLSON
^ However, we do not wish to imply that this is the only appropriate definition. The
point is that this is one potentially useful definition. For discussions of other definitions, see
Beaver [1981a] and Foster [1982].
"" A formal discussion of this point is provided in Ohlson [19816]; ideas of this result are
due to Jaffee and Rubinstein [1975].
MARKET-BASED RESEARCH IN ACCOUNTING 297
Fish Consumption
State 1
individual l ' s \ /
i n d i f f e r e n c e curve
—-iiiv/
. individual 2's
Bread
i n d i f f e r e n c e curve - ' '
y Consumption
State 2
" The literature generally refers to this result as Fisher's Separation Theorem or "ex
ante" stockholder unanimity,
" Because of condition (HJ) on endowments, the result is generally referred to as "ex
post" unanimity.
302 B. LEV AND J. A. OHLSON
I
.%
•o -a
rt .2
OQ i
1
1
s
ft;
g
!
304 B. LEV AND J. A. OHLSON
^ Recall in this context the evidence presented in section 2.3.3 that the disclosure of
inflation-adjusted earnings {FAS No. 33) was not associated with a stock-price reaction, yet
"accounting betas" based on inflation-adjusted earnings were found to be more highly
associated with market betas than historical-cost-based "accounting betas" (Baran, Lak-
onishok, and Ofer [1980]).
MARKET-BASED RESEARCH IN ACCOUNTING 307
dent w«us highly significant and reasonably stable over time. Brown
[1968] reported similar findings for the railroad industry (1954-63), using
a valuation model similar to that of Miller and Modigliani. His iJ^s varied
firom .73 to .92, and the earnings variable again exhibited the highest
explanatory power with respect to equity values.
Given the practical importance of valuation models, it is not surprising
that advanced constructs were developed by analysts. Prominent among
the published ones are the WeUs Fargo and the Value Line models.^ The
former is based on a dividend-discounting model, where estimates of
future dividends are derived from, among other things, estimates of future
eamings growth rates. While the performance of the WeUs Fargo model
has not been subjected to published empirical examination, the Value
Line model drew attention because of some evidence on its ability to
identify over- and undervalued securities (e.g.. Black [1973]), and the
superior (to extrapolative models) predictive perfonnance of eamings
forecasts provided in the Value Line Investment Survey (Brown and
Rozeff [1978]). The Value Line model places stocks in five different
categories, based on their estimated price perfonnance in the coming 12
months. Among the variables determining this classification are the
rankings of past eamings and prices of a given stock relative to other
stocks evaluated by Value Line, the growth in quarterly EPS of a given
stock relative to other stocks ("eamings momentum"), and the difference
between reported and predicted quarterly EPS ("surprise factor").
The CAPM appeared to provide some of the theoretical underpinning
previously missing in an explicit consideration of uncertainty in valuation.
In an empirical application of this model, Litzenberger and Rao [1971]
estimated the price-to-book values of electric utilities using the following
three variables: the expected rate of retum on (book-value) equity, the
systematic risk of the eamings-to-equity ratio, and the expected rate of
growth of book-value equity. Over the period 1960-66, this model ex-
plained about 55 percent of the cross-sectional variation of observed
price-to-book values; the coefficients ofthe three variables, and especially
the expected eamings coefficient, were statistically significant in most
years. More important, the size of the eamings coefficient was rather
stable throughout the estimation period. In addition to the improved
theoretical specification of this model, the stability of the earnings'
coefficient is probably due to the homogeneity of accounting procedures
within the electric utility industry.®^ Bowen [1981] improved the Litzen-
berger and Rao [1971] model by separating utility eamings into operating
eamings and the credits from the "allowance for funds used during
construction." Although the latter component of eamings appeared to be
of lower quality than operating eamings, as assessed by investors, its
incorporation into the model did improve stock valuation. Beaver and
"* For a more complete description of these models, see Foster [1978].
" For additional empirical investigations using similar valuation models see Litzenbereer
and Budd [1972], Dukes [1976], and Foster [19776].
308 B. LEV AND J. A. OHLSON
4. A Final Note
Where does it all leave us? To paraphrase Churchill, did MBAR reach
the end, the beginning of the end, or just the end of the beginning? On
balance, we opt for the third possibility. In many respects MBAR is still
in its infancy, and a number of simultaneous developments seem plausi-
ble. One future reseeu'ch avenue pertains to methodological refinements
in addressing old and familiar questions such as investors' ability to
decode the impact of accounting messages and techniques. The obvious
research reward here is the corroboration/revision of existing findings. A
second line of research will probably raise modestly novel questions using
familiar methodologies, such as tests of information content of noneam-
ings financial data and the evaluation of market consequences of future
accounting regulations. This line of research should generally enrich our
understanding of accounting information and institutions witiiin a capital
market context. However, these two research avenues are more in the
MARKET-BASED RESEARCH IN ACCOUNTING 311
spirit of "the beginning ofthe end" than "the end ofthe beginning." More
innovative and path-breaking research is required for the latter. The
nature of such research can, of course, only be conjectured somewhat
vaguely, but it appears essential that theories of financial information,
rather than just information, be constructed. In any event, we do believe
that this research must be "theory based," more so than the work that
has transpired to date. Only theory can aid us in the development of new
questions and in a more useful (e.g., to policymakers) interpretation of
findings. The greatest challenge to MBAR is the development and
nonsuperfical utilization of theory that transcends the basics of the ECM
and the two-period CAPM. In spite of a rather spotty record in theory
utilization, we remain optimistic that such will indeed be the case.
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