1986
DOI: 10.1111/j.1540-6261.1986.tb04548.x
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Sample‐Dependent Results Using Accounting and Market Data: Some Evidence

Abstract: Studies relating accounting and price data often use the COMPUSTAT or related PDE data base as the source for the accounting data. This practice may introduce a lookahead bias and an ex-post-selection bias into the study. We examine this problem by comparing results from the standard COMPUSTAT data base with those from a data base which suffers from neither bias. We find that rates of return from portfolios chosen on the basis of accounting data from the two data bases differ significantly. Further, we find th… Show more

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Cited by 198 publications
(114 citation statements)
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“…Forming portfolios at the end of June therefore ensures that our tests are predictive in nature, both for companies with December and March fiscal year ends, and that we do not use information that is not actually available to the investor at the time of portfolio formation. Thereby we avoid a possible look-ahead bias (Banz and Breen (1986)). The study also takes into account companies, that have become delisted.…”
Section: Data Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Forming portfolios at the end of June therefore ensures that our tests are predictive in nature, both for companies with December and March fiscal year ends, and that we do not use information that is not actually available to the investor at the time of portfolio formation. Thereby we avoid a possible look-ahead bias (Banz and Breen (1986)). The study also takes into account companies, that have become delisted.…”
Section: Data Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The study also takes into account companies, that have become delisted. In this way we avoid that the database suffers from survivorship bias which, as Banz and Breen (1986) find, might lead to distorted results. Non-industrial companies are also included in the study.…”
Section: Data Descriptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…3 According to SFAS 87, the amortization period will be the average remaining service period of active employees expected to receive benefits under the plan. If all, or almost all, of a plan's participants are inactive, the average remaining life expectancy of the inactive participants shall be used instead of average remaining service.…”
Section: Notesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…3 This amortization decreases earnings of firms with severely underfunded plans. Cash flows are also reduced if at the same time the company makes a financial contribution to the plan.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thus, the abnormal returns would be reduced or vanish if a different methodology and data were used. Such researchers argue that the superior returns are the result of survivor biases in the selection of firms (Banz and Breen 1986), look-ahead bias (Banz and Breen 1986), and a collective data-snooping exercise by many researchers sifting through the same data (Lo and MacKinlay 1990). Other problems include model specification (i.e.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%