Keynesian beauty contest, accounting disclosure, and market efficiency

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Abstract

This paper examines the market efficiency consequences of accounting disclosure in the context of stock markets as a Keynesian beauty contest, an influential metaphor originally proposed by Keynes [1936] and recently formalized by Allen, Morris, and Shin [2006]. In such markets, public information plays an additional commonality role, biasing stock prices away from the consensus fundamental value toward public information. Despite this bias, I demonstrate that provisions of public information always drive stock prices closer to the fundamental value. Hence, as a main source of public information, accounting disclosure enhances market efficiency, and transparency should not be compromised on grounds of the Keynesian-beauty-contest effect. ©, 2008 University of Chicago on behalf of the Institute of Professional Accounting.

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APA

Gao, P. (2008). Keynesian beauty contest, accounting disclosure, and market efficiency. Journal of Accounting Research, 46(4), 785–807. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1475-679X.2008.00295.x

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