Corporate Social Responsibility Report Narratives and Analyst Forecast Accuracy

Date

2017-01-03

ORCID

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer

item.page.doi

Abstract

Standalone corporate social responsibility (CSR) reports vary considerably in the content of information released due to their voluntary nature. In this study, we develop a disclosure score based on the tone, readability, length, and the numerical and horizon content of CSR report narratives, and examine the relationship between the CSR disclosure scores and analyst forecasts. We find that CSR reporters with high disclosure scores are associated with more accurate forecasts, whereas low score CSR reporters are not associated with more accurate forecasts than firms who do not issue CSR reports. The findings are robust to controlling for firm characteristics including CSR activity ratings and financial narratives. The findings are driven by experienced CSR reporters rather than first-time CSR reporters. Together, our findings suggest that the content of CSR reports helps to improve analyst forecast accuracy, and this relationship is more pronounced for CSR reports with more substantial content.

Description

Due to copyright restrictions and/or publisher's policy full text access from Treasures at UT Dallas is limited to current UTD affiliates (use the provided Link to Article).

Keywords

Social responsibility of business, Business analysts, Financial disclosure, Earnings management

item.page.sponsorship

Rights

©2017 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht

Citation