“…acknowledged to more specifically capture uncertainty in short-horizon earnings expectations (e.g., Kinney, Burgstahler, and Martin, 2002;Sheng and Thevenot, 2012). Second, recent evidence links earnings uncertainty to the sign of ex-post bias in analysts' earnings forecasts (e.g., Jackson, 2005;McInnis, 2010;Bissessur and Veenman, 2014), which in turn affects the likelihood that a firm beats or misses consensus expectations at subsequent earnings announcements. Given the strong price reactions associated with firms' beating and missing analyst earnings expectations (e.g., Skinner and Sloan, 2002), the link between dispersion (i.e., earnings uncertainty) and analyst forecast bias can lead to predictable return patterns related to dispersion.…”