Beyond narrative disclosure tone: The upper echelons theory perspective
Beyond narrative disclosure tone: The upper echelons theory perspective
This study investigates the key drives of narrative tone in the UK context where managers have more flexibility to frame narratives with stakeholders. While prior studies examined firm-specific characteristics as determinants of narrative tone, the current study employs the upper echelons theory and focusses on top managers' characteristics. Using computerised textual analysis, our findings suggest that both observed and unobserved CEOs characteristics drive positive tone in the UK context and this relationship is moderated by corporate governance attributes. Specifically, older, female and financial expert CEOs display less positive tone. Considering psychological features, we find that narcissistic CEOs are more likely to display positive tone compared with non-narcissistic CEOs, however, this relationship declines in firms that have a higher independent board. Moreover, we found audit committee and board independence are negatively associated with positive tone. Additionally, we found more females on board increases the negative relationship between female CEOs and positive tone. These results have significant implications for top management, policy makers, regulators and the users of financial reporting.
Narrative tone, textual analysis, CEO characteristics, Corporate governance, Upper echelons theory
Bassyouny, Hesham
b7dc8b27-a0a3-4b3c-be6b-17abc38e3087
Abdelfattah, Tarek
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Tao, Lei
f03b24a9-3149-45c9-be93-6afe5e9ca21a
1 June 2020
Bassyouny, Hesham
b7dc8b27-a0a3-4b3c-be6b-17abc38e3087
Abdelfattah, Tarek
7ccd9aa0-3a35-4723-9e94-49ee8dba196a
Tao, Lei
f03b24a9-3149-45c9-be93-6afe5e9ca21a
Bassyouny, Hesham, Abdelfattah, Tarek and Tao, Lei
(2020)
Beyond narrative disclosure tone: The upper echelons theory perspective.
International Review of Financial Analysis, 70, [101499].
(doi:10.1016/j.irfa.2020.101499).
Abstract
This study investigates the key drives of narrative tone in the UK context where managers have more flexibility to frame narratives with stakeholders. While prior studies examined firm-specific characteristics as determinants of narrative tone, the current study employs the upper echelons theory and focusses on top managers' characteristics. Using computerised textual analysis, our findings suggest that both observed and unobserved CEOs characteristics drive positive tone in the UK context and this relationship is moderated by corporate governance attributes. Specifically, older, female and financial expert CEOs display less positive tone. Considering psychological features, we find that narcissistic CEOs are more likely to display positive tone compared with non-narcissistic CEOs, however, this relationship declines in firms that have a higher independent board. Moreover, we found audit committee and board independence are negatively associated with positive tone. Additionally, we found more females on board increases the negative relationship between female CEOs and positive tone. These results have significant implications for top management, policy makers, regulators and the users of financial reporting.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 16 May 2020
Published date: 1 June 2020
Keywords:
Narrative tone, textual analysis, CEO characteristics, Corporate governance, Upper echelons theory
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Local EPrints ID: 470515
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/470515
ISSN: 1057-5219
PURE UUID: 1e6b37ab-36eb-42f0-a870-dfae77a725fe
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Date deposited: 12 Oct 2022 16:41
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 07:31
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Author:
Hesham Bassyouny
Author:
Tarek Abdelfattah
Author:
Lei Tao
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