Anticipatory Effects around Proposed Regulation: Evidence from Basel III

Author:

Hendricks Bradley E.1,Neilson Jed J.2,Shakespeare Catherine3,Williams Christopher D.3

Affiliation:

1. The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

2. The Pennsylvania State University

3. University of Michigan

Abstract

ABSTRACT Regulation is often proposed, developed, and finalized over a lengthy rule-making period prior to its adoption. We examine the period over which banking authorities discussed, adopted, and implemented Basel III to understand how firms respond to proposed regulation. We find evidence to suggest that affected banks not only lobbied rule-makers against it but also made strategic financial reporting changes and altered their business models in ways that reduced their exposure to the proposed rule prior to rule-makers finalizing the regulation. Further, our results indicate a sequential response, with banks responding through lobbying and strategic financial reporting prior to making business model changes. These findings highlight the interplay among firms’ financial reporting, business model, and political choices in response to proposed regulation and indicate that the appropriate date for an event study may be the regulation’s announcement date rather than its adoption or implementation dates. JEL Classifications: G14; G21; G28; M41; M48.

Publisher

American Accounting Association

Subject

Economics and Econometrics,Finance,Accounting

Reference64 articles.

1. The impact of regulation fair disclosure on investors' prior information quality—evidence from an analysis of changes in trading volume and stock price reactions to earnings announcements;Ahmed,;Journal of Corporate Finance,2007

2. The anticipatory effects of Medicare Part D on drug utilization;Alpert,;Journal of Health Economics,2016

3. The financial reporting of fair value based on managerial inputs versus market inputs: Evidence from mortgage servicing rights;Altamuro,;Review of Accounting Studies,2013

4. The trick does not work if you have already seen the gorilla: How anticipatory effects contaminate pre-treatment measures in field experiments;Ariel,;Journal of Experimental Criminology,2021

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