Equity Carve-Outs, Divergence of Beliefs and Analysts’ Following
Mashwani and Dereeper (2018). Equity carve-outs, divergence of beliefs and analysts’ following. Research in International Business and Finance, volume 43, Page 58-67
28 Pages Posted: 22 Mar 2015 Last revised: 18 Jun 2019
Date Written: March 21, 2015
Abstract
In this paper we try to find out the impact of a carve-out on the standard deviation of earning per share (EPS) forecast (divergence of belief) and the number of analysts following the firm. We were expecting that the standard deviation of EPS forecast will decrease after the carve out as more information will be available to the analysts, once a subsidiary will be partially sold in to the market. But results revealed that the standard deviation of EPS forecast increased rather than decreased. For the number of analysts following the parent, we hypothesized that fewer analysts will be following the parent after the carve-out as some analysts specialized in the subsidiary business may leave the parent and start following the subsidiary. However, the results show that the number of analysts following the parent increases on average after the carve-out and the difference between the number of analysts before and after the event is significant.
Keywords: Earning per share, analysts forecast, carve-out, divergence of belief
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation