Please login to be able to save your searches and receive alerts for new content matching your search criteria.
This chapter examines the value relevance of earnings in high- and low-technology industries, a topic about which unresolved questions remain. The focus is on high-tech firms, given assertions that financial reporting is least effective for their industries. It is found that adjusting for expense mismatching is more effective in low-tech industries, while diversifying noise in high-tech industries substantially increases the association of earnings and stock returns. The value relevance of earnings for either type is indistinguishable when noise and expense mismatching are jointly controlled. It is thus concluded that noise arising from uncertainty of realizing future R&D benefits is the main factor explaining the weaker association of earnings and stock returns for high-tech firms.