Keywords

usefulness, historical accounting reports, information acquisition, EDGAR

Abstract

In this study we investigate the usefulness of historical accounting reports(10-Ks and 10- Qs) by examining four settings where we expect investors to acquire historical reports in order to obtain qualitative and quantitative information that contextualizes and conditions information released in the current period. Using a novel dataset that tracks user requests for accounting reports stored in the SEC EDGAR database, we find that requests for historic reports during the fiscal year are positively associated with financial reporting complexity and that requests around earnings announcements are positively associated with accounting discretion and negative earnings shocks (particularly for conservative firms). Finally, we find that daily requests for historical reports are positively associated with shocks to firm value (particularly negative shocks). Overall, our evidence suggests that historical reports make up an important component of the information mosaic assembled by investors.

Original Publication Citation

Drake, Michael S. and Roulstone, Darren T. and Thornock, Jacob, The Usefulness of Historical Accounting Reports (November 2015). Journal of Accounting & Economics (JAE), 2015.

Document Type

Peer-Reviewed Article

Publication Date

2015

Publisher

Journal of Accounting and Economics

Language

English

College

Marriott School of Business

Department

Accountancy

University Standing at Time of Publication

Full Professor

Included in

Accounting Commons

Share

COinS