Cowboy Economics
Recent News |  Archives |  Tags |  About |  Newsletter |  Submit News |  Links |  Subscribe to CowboyEconomics.com RSS Feed Subscribe
New Articles
Flawed deposit insurance programs need reform, banking expert says 1/6/2009

Nuanced case for outsourcing by automakers, according to new Management Insights 1/5/2009

New study calls for global project finance reform 12/30/2008

Research and innovation essential to economic recovery 12/22/2008

Growing income gap among US families suggests increasing economic insecurity 12/20/2008

Ancestral history explains roots of income inequality 12/19/2008

Big-3 bankruptcy: Job loss less than half oft-cited figure, says UM study 12/18/2008

World fertilizer prices drop dramatically after soaring to all-time highs 12/17/2008

Credit crunch hits cash-strapped homeowners 12/11/2008

Frequent price promotions threaten quality brands 12/9/2008

Snapshot of the recession 12/6/2008

Monetary aggregates play little role in the conduct of monetary policy 12/4/2008

Food price crisis and financial crisis present double threat for poor people 12/3/2008

Agent-based computer models could anticipate future economic crisis 11/29/2008

76 percent of American middle-class households not financially secure 11/28/2008

Study shows overreliance on 'unfiltered' financial reports reduces inexperienced investors' returns (7/18/2008)

Tags:
sec, financial reports, investors

Inexperienced investors can negatively affect their investment results by using "unfiltered" information from Securities and Exchange Commission filings, according to research conducted at the University of Washington.

Frank Hodge, accounting associate professor at the University of Washington's Foster School of Business, and colleagues surveyed 414 non-professional investors to examine their relative use of unfiltered versus analyst-filtered information. One of the first studies to examine the relationship between investors' information choices and their returns, the results linked investors' portfolio returns to their years of investing experience.

According to Hodge, the study results emphasized the negative impact of using unfiltered financial information without sufficient investment experience. "We discovered that less experienced investors did not have the savvy to recognize which financial information was relevant to making good financial decisions," he said.

Newer investors initially rely heavily on filtered information, such as Value Line analyst reports, to make investment decisions. When they access unfiltered information in the form of balance sheets or SEC filings, they must interpret relevant numbers and learn arcane finance terms.

Study authors caution investors with little experience not to overestimate their financial statement analysis abilities, especially early in their investment careers. This advice is particularly relevant given the recent influx of relatively inexperienced equity investors and recent legislation requiring firms to disclose additional, often complex, financial information to market participants. "If people are going to invest in individual stocks, they should make sure they understand the financial information," said Hodge. "Is it credible? Has it been audited? If you don't understand or you don't know where to look, then you may be misled by the information that is presented in very aggregated form on the financial statements."

The pool of non-professional investors is growing and so are the stakes, as more Americans become responsible for their own retirement investing. According to the Association and Investment Company Institute, 91.1 million individuals, or nearly half of all U.S. households, owned mutual funds or individual stocks in 2005 -- a three-fold increase since 1983. Recent changes in Securities and Exchange Commission regulations have provided non-professional investors with unprecedented access to detailed financial information, with the intent of helping them make informed decisions.

The study also shows that access to unfiltered information was increasingly valuable for investors who know how to interpret it. "As investors gain experience and develop 'financial templates' to compile relevant information, their returns usually increase beyond the level of investors who use primarily filtered information," Hodge explained. And for investors with the most experience who used unfiltered information, they actually earned higher returns the more they used it.

Published in Contemporary Accounting Research, the study was authored by Hodge and colleagues W. Brooke Elliott and Kevin E. Jackson of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The authors surveyed 414 investors from the National Association of Investors Corporation, a sample group that reflects the general population of American investors.

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by the University of Washington

Post Comments:

Search

  Archives |  Submit News |  Advertise With Us |  Contact Us |  Links
All contents © 2000 - 2010 Web Doodle, LLC. All rights reserved.