posted on 2009-07-01, 00:00authored byBjorn N. Jorgensen, Jing LiJing Li, Gil Sadka
Prior research documents that individual stock returns respond to earnings differently
under new accounting standards, regulations, or changes in enforcement. This paper
examines whether this result extends to the aggregate stock market. We take a macro
perspective and study the properties of aggregate earnings. First, we document that
aggregate earnings and operating income have remained relatively stable after 1951,
notwithstanding numerous changes in accounting standards. Second, we document that
the relation between aggregate stock market returns and aggregate earnings also appears
stable over long time periods. Third, we show that the relation between aggregate
earnings, GDP and industrial production has remained stable over time as well. Finally,
we show that common earnings attributes (such as asymmetric timeliness, asymmetric
earnings persistence, and predictability of cash flows), while present in firm-level
analyses, disappear in the aggregate.