US

Quarterly Earnings

Question A:

Letting publicly traded US firms report earnings annually rather than quarterly would lead their executives to place more weight on long-term issues in their investments and other decisions.

Responses weighted by each expert's confidence

Question B:

A switch from quarterly to annual earnings reports would, on net, benefit shareholders.

Responses weighted by each expert's confidence

Question A Participant Responses

Participant University Vote Confidence Bio/Vote History
Acemoglu
Daron Acemoglu
MIT
Uncertain
5
Bio/Vote History
Alesina
Alberto Alesina
Harvard
No Opinion
Bio/Vote History
Altonji
Joseph Altonji
Yale
Agree
3
Bio/Vote History
Auerbach
Alan Auerbach
Berkeley
Disagree
3
Bio/Vote History
Autor
David Autor
MIT
No Opinion
Bio/Vote History
Baicker
Katherine Baicker
University of Chicago
Uncertain
3
Bio/Vote History
Banerjee
Abhijit Banerjee
MIT
Agree
7
Bio/Vote History
Bertrand
Marianne Bertrand
Chicago
Strongly Agree
6
Bio/Vote History
Brunnermeier
Markus Brunnermeier
Princeton
Agree
9
Bio/Vote History
Chetty
Raj Chetty
Harvard Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Chevalier
Judith Chevalier
Yale
Uncertain
8
Bio/Vote History
Firms may well still choose to report quarterly. And a year is still a short horizon for investment projects.
-see background information here
Cutler
David Cutler
Harvard
Uncertain
5
Bio/Vote History
Deaton
Angus Deaton
Princeton
No Opinion
Bio/Vote History
Duffie
Darrell Duffie
Stanford Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Edlin
Aaron Edlin
Berkeley
Agree
5
Bio/Vote History
Eichengreen
Barry Eichengreen
Berkeley
Agree
5
Bio/Vote History
"Allow them to" would be more appropriate language than "lead them to." At most a _very_modest positive.
Einav
Liran Einav
Stanford
Uncertain
6
Bio/Vote History
Fair
Ray Fair
Yale
Disagree
4
Bio/Vote History
Finkelstein
Amy Finkelstein
MIT Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Goldberg
Pinelopi Goldberg
Yale Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Goolsbee
Austan Goolsbee
Chicago
Agree
1
Bio/Vote History
Greenstone
Michael Greenstone
University of Chicago
Uncertain
2
Bio/Vote History
Hall
Robert Hall
Stanford
Disagree
8
Bio/Vote History
There's almost no support for short-term-ism. And earnings numbers themselves are unimportant. The market values overall prospects.
Hart
Oliver Hart
Harvard
Agree
5
Bio/Vote History
I am in favor of letting firms do this but only if it is part of their charter or approved by shareholders. It should not be a blanket rule.
Holmström
Bengt Holmström
MIT
Agree
5
Bio/Vote History
No firm evidence, just anecdotal. Not clear there is any better periodicity.
Hoxby
Caroline Hoxby
Stanford
Disagree
8
Bio/Vote History
Smart investors are perfectly capable of evaluating firms using a combination of multiple quarterly reports.
Hoynes
Hilary Hoynes
Berkeley
Agree
5
Bio/Vote History
Judd
Kenneth Judd
Stanford
Strongly Disagree
7
Bio/Vote History
This would increase the information difference between insiders and outsiders. Management would have more time to hide their mistakes.
Kaplan
Steven Kaplan
Chicago Booth
Strongly Disagree
8
Bio/Vote History
Two countervailing effects -- perhaps less short-term, but less accountability. The latter is a bigger problem than the former.
Kashyap
Anil Kashyap
Chicago Booth
Uncertain
3
Bio/Vote History
It would relieve short term pressure, but not clear that they would necessarily become patient long-term oriented.
Klenow
Pete Klenow
Stanford
Agree
5
Bio/Vote History
Levin
Jonathan Levin
Stanford
Agree
3
Bio/Vote History
Maskin
Eric Maskin
Harvard Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Nordhaus
William Nordhaus
Yale
Agree
3
Bio/Vote History
Assume means requiring. Given all the pressures, unlikely that would be major change, so epsilon effect. They might report anyway.
Saez
Emmanuel Saez
Berkeley Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Samuelson
Larry Samuelson
Yale
Agree
6
Bio/Vote History
A year is still too short of a horizon to be confident that executives would appropriately weight long-term issues, which may span decades.
Scheinkman
José Scheinkman
Columbia University
Disagree
7
Bio/Vote History
Schmalensee
Richard Schmalensee
MIT
Agree
2
Bio/Vote History
This is almost trivially true, since there would be no quarter-to-quarter considerations. But it is hard to imagine a big effect.
Shapiro
Carl Shapiro
Berkeley
Disagree
3
Bio/Vote History
Shimer
Robert Shimer
University of Chicago
Uncertain
3
Bio/Vote History
Thaler
Richard Thaler
Chicago Booth
Agree
4
Bio/Vote History
Recent working paper says yes. http://bit.ly/1HgC0lg
Udry
Christopher Udry
Northwestern
Uncertain
1
Bio/Vote History

Question B Participant Responses

Participant University Vote Confidence Bio/Vote History
Acemoglu
Daron Acemoglu
MIT
Uncertain
4
Bio/Vote History
Alesina
Alberto Alesina
Harvard
No Opinion
Bio/Vote History
Altonji
Joseph Altonji
Yale
Disagree
6
Bio/Vote History
Auerbach
Alan Auerbach
Berkeley
Disagree
5
Bio/Vote History
Autor
David Autor
MIT
No Opinion
Bio/Vote History
Baicker
Katherine Baicker
University of Chicago
Uncertain
3
Bio/Vote History
Banerjee
Abhijit Banerjee
MIT
Agree
7
Bio/Vote History
Bertrand
Marianne Bertrand
Chicago
Agree
5
Bio/Vote History
Brunnermeier
Markus Brunnermeier
Princeton
Uncertain
5
Bio/Vote History
Chetty
Raj Chetty
Harvard Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Chevalier
Judith Chevalier
Yale
Uncertain
5
Bio/Vote History
Cutler
David Cutler
Harvard
Uncertain
6
Bio/Vote History
Deaton
Angus Deaton
Princeton
No Opinion
Bio/Vote History
Duffie
Darrell Duffie
Stanford Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Edlin
Aaron Edlin
Berkeley
Agree
6
Bio/Vote History
Eichengreen
Barry Eichengreen
Berkeley
Uncertain
5
Bio/Vote History
Tradeoffs for investors (less transparency for example).
Einav
Liran Einav
Stanford
Uncertain
6
Bio/Vote History
Fair
Ray Fair
Yale
Disagree
4
Bio/Vote History
Finkelstein
Amy Finkelstein
MIT Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Goldberg
Pinelopi Goldberg
Yale Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Goolsbee
Austan Goolsbee
Chicago
Agree
1
Bio/Vote History
Greenstone
Michael Greenstone
University of Chicago
Uncertain
2
Bio/Vote History
Hall
Robert Hall
Stanford
Disagree
8
Bio/Vote History
Public markets need certified disclosure regimes. Businesses that are harmed by disclosure should be private.
Hart
Oliver Hart
Harvard
Uncertain
10
Bio/Vote History
For some firms it might be better, for others worse. This is not a case where one size fits all.
Holmström
Bengt Holmström
MIT
Strongly Disagree
8
Bio/Vote History
One year far too infrequent for well functioning markets.
Hoxby
Caroline Hoxby
Stanford
Disagree
7
Bio/Vote History
It is difficult for someone to benefit from being forced to be less informed. There is such a thing as free disposal.
Hoynes
Hilary Hoynes
Berkeley
Agree
5
Bio/Vote History
Judd
Kenneth Judd
Stanford
Strongly Disagree
7
Bio/Vote History
Kaplan
Steven Kaplan
Chicago Booth
Strongly Disagree
10
Bio/Vote History
Perhaps less short-term, but less accountability. Less short-term a minor improvement if any; less accountability a bigger cost.
Kashyap
Anil Kashyap
Chicago Booth
Uncertain
3
Bio/Vote History
Very hard to know the net effects, for instance it would become easier to hide bad decisions for longer periods.
Klenow
Pete Klenow
Stanford
Uncertain
4
Bio/Vote History
Levin
Jonathan Levin
Stanford
Uncertain
3
Bio/Vote History
Maskin
Eric Maskin
Harvard Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Nordhaus
William Nordhaus
Yale
Disagree
3
Bio/Vote History
Firms would probably report anyway. If not, would lead to more uncertainty and possibly more volatility. In any case, small effect.
Saez
Emmanuel Saez
Berkeley Did Not Answer Bio/Vote History
Samuelson
Larry Samuelson
Yale
Uncertain
1
Bio/Vote History
The modest push toward better weighting of long-term issues must be balanced against the attendant loss of information and accountability.
Scheinkman
José Scheinkman
Columbia University
Disagree
7
Bio/Vote History
Schmalensee
Richard Schmalensee
MIT
Uncertain
3
Bio/Vote History
Perhaps a touch less short-termism but a lot less timely information. Hard to see a net gain.
Shapiro
Carl Shapiro
Berkeley
Disagree
4
Bio/Vote History
Shimer
Robert Shimer
University of Chicago
Disagree
5
Bio/Vote History
Quarterly earnings reports make it easier to monitor managers, even if earnings can be manipulated.
Thaler
Richard Thaler
Chicago Booth
Agree
5
Bio/Vote History
Again see http://bit.ly/1HgC0lg
Udry
Christopher Udry
Northwestern
Uncertain
1
Bio/Vote History