This study finds that analysts' forecast data files, commonly used by accountants and financial analysts to estimate market expectations about earnings announcements, contain inaccurate historical data for companies that split their common stock. These inaccuracies result because stock split adjustments are made retrospectively and split‐adjusted data are rounded. Moreover, because well‐performing firms are more likely to execute stock splits, the consequences of the stock split problem are systematic, potentially distorting both time‐series and cross‐sectional characteristics of forecast errors. The analysis also demonstrates that the problem can influence interpretations of security price reactions to earnings announcements. To illustrate this point, we report evidence suggesting that errors induced by rounding split‐adjusted data alter conclusions about how investors interpret earnings that meet, but do not exceed, the consensus forecast.
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1 December 2002
Research Article|
December 01 2002
The Impact of Split Adjusting and Rounding on Analysts' Forecast Error Calculations
William R. Baber, Professor;
William R. Baber, Professor
George Washington University.
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Sok‐Hyon Kang, Professor
Sok‐Hyon Kang, Professor
George Washington University.
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Accounting Horizons (2002) 16 (4): 277–289.
Citation
William R. Baber, Sok‐Hyon Kang; The Impact of Split Adjusting and Rounding on Analysts' Forecast Error Calculations. Accounting Horizons 1 December 2002; 16 (4): 277–289. doi: https://doi.org/10.2308/acch.2002.16.4.277
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