TY - JOUR
T1 - Extracting Sustainable Earnings from Profit Margins
AU - Amir, Eli
AU - Einhorn, Eti
AU - Kama, Itay
N1 - Funding Information: We thank Joshua Livnat, Doron Nissim, Terrance Skantz, Florin Vasvari, Amir Ziv, and seminar participants in the 2008 Tel Aviv International Accounting Conference, the 2009 American Accounting Association Annual Meetings, INSEAD, the University of New South Wales (Sydney), the University of Melbourne, the University of Queensland (Brisbane), and the Stockholm School of Economics for many useful comments. Eli Amir is grateful to London Business School for research funding while he was a faculty member there. Eti Einhorn and Itay Kama are grateful to the Henry Crown Institute of Business Research in Israel at Tel Aviv University for financial support.
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - Revenues and expenses are fundamentally proportional to one another, but are likely to be disproportionally affected by transitory items or economic shocks. We build on this observation and propose a new measure of sustainable earnings based on deviations from normal profit margins. While some other sustainable earnings metrics attempt to identify transitory components on a line-by-line basis, our measure, referred to as the intensity of core earnings (ICE), uses ratio analysis to extract the transitory portion of earnings from all line items. We find that the ICE, as measured here, is positively associated with earnings persistence, better earnings predictability, and stronger market reaction to unexpected earnings. We also find that our measure is positively associated with post-earnings announcement excess stock returns. Comparing our measure with an accrual-based measure of earnings quality, we find that, in general, the two metrics provide distinct incremental information relative to one another and in some instances our measure is better than an accrual-based measure in assessing earnings quality.
AB - Revenues and expenses are fundamentally proportional to one another, but are likely to be disproportionally affected by transitory items or economic shocks. We build on this observation and propose a new measure of sustainable earnings based on deviations from normal profit margins. While some other sustainable earnings metrics attempt to identify transitory components on a line-by-line basis, our measure, referred to as the intensity of core earnings (ICE), uses ratio analysis to extract the transitory portion of earnings from all line items. We find that the ICE, as measured here, is positively associated with earnings persistence, better earnings predictability, and stronger market reaction to unexpected earnings. We also find that our measure is positively associated with post-earnings announcement excess stock returns. Comparing our measure with an accrual-based measure of earnings quality, we find that, in general, the two metrics provide distinct incremental information relative to one another and in some instances our measure is better than an accrual-based measure in assessing earnings quality.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84890429980&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - https://doi.org/10.1080/09638180.2012.749067
DO - https://doi.org/10.1080/09638180.2012.749067
M3 - مقالة
SN - 0963-8180
VL - 22
SP - 685
EP - 718
JO - European Accounting Review
JF - European Accounting Review
IS - 4
ER -