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Jeremiah Green
Professor
Nelson D. Durst Chair in Accounting Education
Education
PhD in Business Administration, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill (May 2010).
Integrated Bachelor of Science with a Master of Accountancy, Brigham Young University (August 2005).Research Interest
Financial Accounting, financial statement analysis, data analytics, institutional investors and analysts’ use of accounting numbersCourses Taught
ACCT 658: Advanced Accounting Data Analytics
BUSN 470: Applied Natural Language Processing for Business Decisions
ACCT 688: Doctoral Seminar
Biography
Professor Green does empirical capital markets research focused on the use of accounting information. He studies hedge funds, equity and debt analysts, auditors, managers, the business press, and trading strategies.
Research Publications
“Ethnic Minority Analysts’ Conference Call Participation,” with Rachel Flam, Josh Lee, and Nate Sharp. Journal of Accounting Research 61: 1591-1631 (2023).
“The asymmetric mispricing information in analysts’ target prices,” with John Hand and Anywhere Sikochi. Review of Accounting Studies (2022).
“Intangible Investments, Scaling, and the Trend in the Accrual–Cash Flow Association,” with Henock Louis and Jalal Vafi Sani. Journal of Accounting Research 60: 1551-1582. (September 2022). Top 10 most-cited Journal of Accounting Research papers published 2022-2023 (2024).
“Market Uncertainty and the Importance of Media Coverage at Earnings Announcements,” with Sam Bonsall and Karl Muller. Journal of Accounting and Economics 69(1) 101-264 (February 2020).
“Are Credit Ratings More Rigorous for Widely Covered Firms?,” with Sam Bonsall and Karl Muller. The Accounting Review 93:6, 61-94 (November 2018).
“Hedge Fund Voluntary Disclosure,” with Gavin Cassar, Joseph Gerakos, John Hand, and Matthew Neal. The Accounting Review 93:2, 117-135 (March 2018).
“Analysts’ Influence on Managers’ Guidance” with Kimball Chapman. The Accounting Review93:1, 45-69 (January 2018).
“The Characteristics that Provide Independent Information about Average U.S. Monthly Stock Returns,” with John Hand and Frank Zhang. Review of Financial Studies 30:12, 389-4436 (December 2017).
“Errors and Questionable Judgments in Analysts’ DCF Models,” with John Hand and Frank Zhang. Review of Accounting Studies 21:2, 596-632 (June 2016).
“The Supraview of Return Predictive Signals” with John Hand and Frank Zhang. Review of Accounting Studies 18:3, 692-730 (September 2013).
“Going, going, gone? The apparent demise of the accruals anomaly” with John Hand and Mark Soliman, Management Science 55:5, 797-816 (May 2011).