Disclosure quality ratings by the stock exchanges: evidence from China

The stock exchanges in China assess firms’ disclosure quality annually according to a grading sheet. The grading sheet evaluates mandatory and voluntary disclosures, investor relations, and compliance with and violations of securities laws; some items are publicly observable, others are either not p...

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Main Authors: Shuo Yang, Jingran Zhao
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Emerald Publishing 2025-07-01
Series:China Accounting and Finance Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/cafr-09-2024-0161/full/html
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author Shuo Yang
Jingran Zhao
author_facet Shuo Yang
Jingran Zhao
author_sort Shuo Yang
collection DOAJ
description The stock exchanges in China assess firms’ disclosure quality annually according to a grading sheet. The grading sheet evaluates mandatory and voluntary disclosures, investor relations, and compliance with and violations of securities laws; some items are publicly observable, others are either not publicly observable or require managerial discretionary judgement. This paper examines whether the ratings simply summarize easily observable public signals of disclosure quality or offer information less accessible to investors. We regress raw ratings on public signals on the grading sheet and obtain the residuals as excess ratings. We examine the association between excess ratings and market-based and accounting-based information quality measures to verify that excess ratings are not noises. We further examine whether the market response to the announcement of ratings is associated with excess ratings and whether excess ratings are predictive of future outcomes. We find that the market response to the announcement of the assessment result is not related to excess ratings. Excess ratings are associated with several market-based and accounting-based information quality measures, suggesting that they are not noises. Excess ratings are predictive of an array of outcomes in the following year, including institutional ownership, analyst coverage, analyst forecast accuracy and dispersion, and securities enforcement. We carefully examine the items on the grading sheet and obtain excess ratings orthogonal to easily observable public signals. We find that excess ratings contain private information about firms’ fundamentals and compliance with securities laws which investors cannot easily observe or access, but investors ignore this information.
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spelling doaj-art-a744db5094ba4b52b70964edf48c68c72025-08-20T03:31:16ZengEmerald PublishingChina Accounting and Finance Review2307-30552025-07-0127334036310.1108/cafr-09-2024-0161Disclosure quality ratings by the stock exchanges: evidence from ChinaShuo Yang0https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4993-9935Jingran Zhao1https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6029-5259Kean UniversityThe Hong Kong Polytechnic UniversityThe stock exchanges in China assess firms’ disclosure quality annually according to a grading sheet. The grading sheet evaluates mandatory and voluntary disclosures, investor relations, and compliance with and violations of securities laws; some items are publicly observable, others are either not publicly observable or require managerial discretionary judgement. This paper examines whether the ratings simply summarize easily observable public signals of disclosure quality or offer information less accessible to investors. We regress raw ratings on public signals on the grading sheet and obtain the residuals as excess ratings. We examine the association between excess ratings and market-based and accounting-based information quality measures to verify that excess ratings are not noises. We further examine whether the market response to the announcement of ratings is associated with excess ratings and whether excess ratings are predictive of future outcomes. We find that the market response to the announcement of the assessment result is not related to excess ratings. Excess ratings are associated with several market-based and accounting-based information quality measures, suggesting that they are not noises. Excess ratings are predictive of an array of outcomes in the following year, including institutional ownership, analyst coverage, analyst forecast accuracy and dispersion, and securities enforcement. We carefully examine the items on the grading sheet and obtain excess ratings orthogonal to easily observable public signals. We find that excess ratings contain private information about firms’ fundamentals and compliance with securities laws which investors cannot easily observe or access, but investors ignore this information.https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/cafr-09-2024-0161/full/htmldisclosure quality ratingstock exchangechinaenforcementprivate information
spellingShingle Shuo Yang
Jingran Zhao
Disclosure quality ratings by the stock exchanges: evidence from China
China Accounting and Finance Review
disclosure quality rating
stock exchange
china
enforcement
private information
title Disclosure quality ratings by the stock exchanges: evidence from China
title_full Disclosure quality ratings by the stock exchanges: evidence from China
title_fullStr Disclosure quality ratings by the stock exchanges: evidence from China
title_full_unstemmed Disclosure quality ratings by the stock exchanges: evidence from China
title_short Disclosure quality ratings by the stock exchanges: evidence from China
title_sort disclosure quality ratings by the stock exchanges evidence from china
topic disclosure quality rating
stock exchange
china
enforcement
private information
url https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/cafr-09-2024-0161/full/html
work_keys_str_mv AT shuoyang disclosurequalityratingsbythestockexchangesevidencefromchina
AT jingranzhao disclosurequalityratingsbythestockexchangesevidencefromchina