Disclosure regulation and competitive interactions: Evidence from the oil and gas industry

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Abstract

We study the effects of mandatory disclosure on competitive interactions in the setting of oil and gas (O&G) reserve disclosures by North American public firms. We document that reserve disclosures inform competitors: when one firm announces larger increases in O&G reserves, competitors experience lower announcement returns and higher real investments. To sharpen identification, we analyze several sources of cross-sectional variation in these patterns, the degree of competition, and the sign and the source of reserves changes. We also exploit two plausibly exogenous shocks: the tightening of the O&G reserve disclosure rules and the introduction of fracking technology. Additional tests more directly focused on the presence of proprietary costs confirm that the mandated reserve disclosures result in a relative loss of competitive edge for announcing firms. Our collective evidence highlights important trade-offs in the market-wide effects of disclosure regulation.

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Badia, M., Duro, M., Jorgensen, B. N., & Ormazabal, G. (2021). Disclosure regulation and competitive interactions: Evidence from the oil and gas industry. Accounting Review, 96(5), 1–29. https://doi.org/10.2308/TAR-2018-0436

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