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The economic consequences of fair value disclosures: a manifestation of the buried facts doctrine
Author(s) -
BarHod Assaf,
Chen Ester,
Gavious Ilanit
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
accounting and finance
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.645
H-Index - 49
eISSN - 1467-629X
pISSN - 0810-5391
DOI - 10.1111/acfi.12630
Subject(s) - ex ante , accounting , information overload , business , fair value , relevance (law) , value (mathematics) , quality (philosophy) , doctrine , information quality , voluntary disclosure , index (typography) , actuarial science , economics , information system , law , political science , philosophy , epistemology , machine learning , world wide web , computer science , macroeconomics
There is an ongoing debate about the need for improved intelligibility of corporate information. In particular, there is widespread dissatisfaction with the length and understandability of the information provided in firms’ financial statements. This paper investigates the determinants and effectiveness of corporate disclosures. To identify variation in the quantity and quality of corporate disclosures, we use fair‐value‐related disclosures as our setting. We create a firm‐year‐specific disclosure index to evaluate the quantity of fair‐value‐related information the firms convey. The quality of the information is measured via its ex ante ability to mitigate investors’ uncertainty about the estimated fair values. Our results suggest that managers regard quantity and quality as complementary features of corporate disclosures. Nevertheless, the evidence reveals that, for investors, this is not the case. Rather, large quantities of information appear to overload investors, thereby obscuring high‐quality disclosures. Moreover, neither the value relevance, nor the informativeness, of the fair‐valued items increase with the amount of related disclosures provided. Overall, we document the detrimental effect of information overload in burying facts critically important to investors and diminishing investor reliance on financial statements as a source of information for decision making.