Disappearing investment-cash flow sensitivities: Earnings have not become a worse proxy for cash flow |
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Authors: | Niclas Andrén Håkan Jankensgård |
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Institution: | Department of Business Administration, Lund University, P.O. Box 7080, 220 07 Lund, Sweden |
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Abstract: | According to a recent conjecture in the literature, earnings have become a poorer proxy for cash flow from operations over time. We find that since 1988, when cash flow statements started to be consistently reported in Compustat, the cash effectiveness of earnings has actually increased for a large sample of US manufacturing firms. This occurs despite the introduction of fair value accounting and increasing accounting accruals during the last three decades. Also contrary to the conjecture, using more comprehensive measures of cash flow does not restore the investment-cash flow sensitivity, which continues to be around 0.05 in more recent periods. |
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Keywords: | accruals cash effectiveness cash flow earnings financial constraints investment-cash flow sensitivity investment G30 G32 M41 |
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