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2023 | Buch

Competition Culture and Corporate Finance

A Measure of Firms’ Competition Culture Based on a Textual Analysis of 10-K Filings

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This book introduces a measure of firms’ competition culture based on a textual analysis and natural language processing (NPL) of firms’ 10-K filings. Using this measure, the book explores the relationship between competition culture and various phenomena in corporate finance, specifically, institutional ownership structure, stock return performance, idiosyncratic stock price crash risk, meeting/beating analysts’ earnings expectations, and earnings management activity, for a large sample of US-based financial and non-financial firms. In particular, the book provides evidence that transient institutional ownership intensifies firms’ competition culture, while dedicated institutional ownership lessens it. In addition, the book’s findings suggest that firms with greater levels of competition culture achieve higher levels of short-term stock return performance, experience greater incidence of idiosyncratic stock price crashes, and are more prone to meet/beat analysts forecast and engage in accruals-based earnings manipulation.

Finally, the book examines the role played by competition culture in financial firms (i.e., banks). Specifically, the book explores the effect of competition culture on bank lending and shows that banks with greater levels of competition culture are generally more prone to engage in procyclical lending activity. The findings of the book have significant policy implications and will be of interests to regulators, accounting standard-setters, managers and those charged with firm governance, career academics and researchers, graduates, and those generally interested in the role played by corporate culture in the related fields of finance, economics, and accounting.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Introduction
Abstract
Traditionally, researchers in finance have tended to adopt a rather negative attitude towards the role played by culture in explaining firms’ economic outcomes.
Terry Harris
Chapter 2. Literature Review: What Is Culture?
Abstract
What is culture? Culture is a broad and inherently complex concept that can be defined as those values, norms, customs, and beliefs held by particular societal groups (please see e.g., Schein in Human Resource Management in International Firms. Palgrave Macmillan, London, England, 1990; Schein in Organizational Culture and Leadership: A Dynamic View. Jossey-Bass, San Francisco, CA, 1992; Guiso et al. in The Journal of Economic Perspectives 20:23–48, 2006; Zingales in Journal of Financial Economics 117:1–4, 2015; Graham et al. in Journal of Financial Economics 146:552–593, 2022). Put another way, culture can be said to represent the nexus of all implicit and explicit contracts that govern behaviour and human interaction within societal groups (Benabou and Tirole in The Review of Economic Studies 70:489–520, 2003; Benabou and Tirole in The Quarterly Journal of Economics 126:805–855, 2011).
Terry Harris
Chapter 3. Literature Review: What Is Textual Analysis, and Can We Use It to Measure Corporate Culture?
Abstract
The textual analysis approach also sometimes referred to as content analysis, computational linguistics, information retrieval, natural language processing, etc., refers to the systematic and objective quantification of the semantic content contained in a body of text. This notion of the parsing text to discover patterns allows for the unearthing of valuable information in text and has a long history and has been applied in many different contexts and disciplines.
Terry Harris
Chapter 4. Institutional Investors and Competition Culture
Abstract
In recent decades, a growing literature emphasizes the importance of corporate culture for influencing a firm’s economic outcomes.
Terry Harris
Chapter 5. Competition Culture and Performance
Abstract
In this chapter, we investigate whether and how competition culture impacts firms’ stock return performance.
Terry Harris
Chapter 6. Competition Culture and Crash Risk
Abstract
We now investigate whether and how firms’ competition culture influences firm-specific stock price crash risk. Furthermore, we explore whether firm’s competition culture is a channel through which institutional investors are able to affect firm’s crash risk.
Terry Harris
Chapter 7. Competition Culture and Meeting/Beating Analysts’ Earnings Forecasts
Abstract
In this chapter, we investigate whether and how firms’ competition culture influences their propensity to meet and/or beat analysts’ earnings forecasts. We have argued that the mechanism underpinning the relationship between competition culture and stock price crashes is the hoarding of “bad” news, which once released results in sudden idiosyncratic stock price crashes. If high competition culture firms systematically withhold negative news from the market in order to meet the expectations of investors, then we expect to observe such firms being more likely to consistently meet/beat analysts’ earnings forecasts.
Terry Harris
Chapter 8. Competition Culture and Earnings Management
Abstract
In recent decades, earnings manipulation has attracted significant attention from researchers and regulators around the globe (see e.g., Healy in Journal of Accounting and Economics 7:85–107, 1985; Kothari et al. in Journal of Accounting and Economics 39:163–197, 2005; Bergstresser and Philippon in Journal of Financial Economics 80:511–529, 2006; Fan et al. in Journal of Banking & Finance 107, 2019; Jiang et al. in Journal of Corporate Finance 64, 2020; Lara et al. in Journal of Accounting and Public Policy 39, 2020; Bertomeu et al. in Management Science 67:5145–5162, 2021). This is in part due to the suggestion that the deliberate misrepresentation of reported financial performance results in earnings reflecting the desires of management as opposed to the financial performance of the firm and the danger this poses for the investing public.
Terry Harris
Chapter 9. Competition Culture and Bank Lending
Abstract
In this final study chapter, we will explore whether competition culture has implications for lending behaviour.
Terry Harris
Chapter 10. Conclusion
Abstract
In this book, we explore the role that a specific type of corporate culture; namely, competition culture plays in corporate finance. To be sure firms’ culture is a broad, intangible, and inherently complex concept (see e.g., Schein in Human Resource Management in International Firms. Palgrave Macmillan, London, England, 1990; Schein in Organizational Culture and Leadership: A Dynamic View. Jossey-Bass, 1992;; Benabou and Tirole in The Review of Economic Studies 70:489–520, 2003; Benabou and Tirole in The Quarterly Journal of Economics 126:805–855, 2011;; Zingales in Journal of Financial Economics 117:1–4, 2015; Graham et al. in Journal of Financial Economics 146:552–593, 2022), which is expected to be influenced by and reflect the values and practices of top management and those charged with governance.
Terry Harris
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
Competition Culture and Corporate Finance
verfasst von
Terry Harris
Copyright-Jahr
2023
Electronic ISBN
978-3-031-30156-8
Print ISBN
978-3-031-30155-1
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-30156-8