Description |
This dissertation examines the business description firms include in their 10-Ks. Using the Latent Dirichlet Allocation topic extraction methodology, I identify the highest trending topic for each industry and each firm's loading on this topic. In the first chapter, after controlling for risk, I find that firms with higher loading on the highest trending topic are more likely to experience lower future returns. These findings are consistent with the notion that investors are willing to pay more for firms that use trendy language, even though the higher prices are not justified by their fundamental values. In the second chapter, I disentangle the relations between 10-K trend loading, earnings management, and analysts' forecast errors during the 10-K release. I find that 10-K trend loading and earnings management are conditionally uncorrelated, and that analysts can make forecast errors contrary to the level of 10-K trend loading, correcting the short-run market underreactions. |