2010
DOI: 10.5296/ajfa.v1i2.194
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Institutional investor and accounting restatement

Abstract: This paper investigates the role that institutional investors play in the market reaction to accounting restatements. We show that transient institutional investors, defined as institutions with short investment horizons and high portfolio turnover, significantly reduce their holdings in a restating firm at least one quarter prior to the quarter of the restatement announcement. This result holds after controlling for factors such as return momentum, unexpected earnings, size, book-to-market, and the portfolio … Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Restating firms and their competitors generally experience negative abnormal returns at the restatement announcement , Xu et al [2006], Kravet and Shevlin [2007], Gleason et al [2008]). Moreover, financial analysts and institutional investors do not appear to fully anticipate restatements (Griffin [2003], Hribar et al [2005]). The only group of investors able to predict restatements are insiders and short-sellers (Dechow et al [1996], Desai et al [2002], Griffin [2003], Efendi et al [2005]).…”
Section: Learning From Restatementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Restating firms and their competitors generally experience negative abnormal returns at the restatement announcement , Xu et al [2006], Kravet and Shevlin [2007], Gleason et al [2008]). Moreover, financial analysts and institutional investors do not appear to fully anticipate restatements (Griffin [2003], Hribar et al [2005]). The only group of investors able to predict restatements are insiders and short-sellers (Dechow et al [1996], Desai et al [2002], Griffin [2003], Efendi et al [2005]).…”
Section: Learning From Restatementsmentioning
confidence: 99%