Charles A. Dice Center for Research in Financial Economics
Kee-Hong Bae, René M. Stulz, and Hongping Tan
ABSTRACT
This paper examines whether analysts resident in a country make more precise earnings forecasts for firms in that country than analysts who are not resident in that country. Using a sample of 32 countries, we find that there is an economically and statistically significant analyst local advantage even after controlling for firm and analyst characteristics. The importance of the local advantage is inversely related to the quality of the information provided by firms. In particular, the local advantage is high in countries where earnings are smoothed more, less information is disclosed by firms, and firm idiosyncratic information explains a smaller fraction of stock returns. The local advantage is also negatively related to whether a firm has foreign assets, to market participation by foreign investors and by institutions and it is positively related to holdings by insiders. There is a positive correlation between the extent to which U.S. investors underweight a country’s stocks and that country’s analyst local advantage.
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