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How do managers' non-responses during earnings calls affect analyst forecasts

General Economics 2025-05-27 v1 Economics

Abstract

This paper examines the impact of managers' non-responses (NORs) during quarterly earnings calls on analyst forecast behavior by developing a novel measure of NORs using two large language models: ChatGPT-4 and LLaMA 3.3. We adopt a three step prompting approach including identification, classification, and evaluation, to extract NORs from earnings call transcripts of S&P 500 firms. We find that a higher incidence of NORs is significantly associated with greater analyst forecast errors, dispersion, and uncertainty. These effects are more pronounced among firms with high institutional ownership, greater R&D expenditures, operations across multiple industries, and earnings calls held during the COVID-19 period. Further analysis shows that NORs are followed by greater post-earnings announcement drift, higher return volatility, increased trading volume, and wider bid-ask spreads, suggesting that NORs raise information processing costs and exacerbate uncertainty. Overall, our findings indicate that managers' non-responses during earnings calls impair the information environment for analysts and investors.

Cite

@article{arxiv.2505.18419,
  title  = {How do managers' non-responses during earnings calls affect analyst forecasts},
  author = {Qingwen Liang and Matias Carrasco Kind},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2505.18419},
  year   = {2025}
}
R2 v1 2026-07-01T02:35:07.543Z