Paul A. Griffin Explained

Paul A. Griffin
Occupation:Accountant, academic, and author
Discipline:Corporate disclosure
Capital market behavior
Environmental accounting
Education:M.A. in Operations Research and Economic Theory
Ph.D. in Accounting
Alma Mater:Victoria University of Wellington
The Ohio State University
Workplaces:Graduate School of Management, University of California, Davis

Paul A. Griffin is an accountant, academic, and author. He is Distinguished Professor Emeritus at the Graduate School of Management, University of California, Davis.[1]

Griffin is most known for his research on how corporate information impacts financial market prices. He has also studied how investors respond to accounting regulations, corporate social responsibility (CSR) disclosures, and climate-related events such as wildfires and heat waves, as well as the disclosure practices of R&D-intensive firms. In addition to his journal articles, he has authored numerous monographs, including Usefulness to Investors and Creditors of Information Provided by Financial Reporting, Cases in Corporate Financial Reporting, and Accounting for the Translation of Foreign Currencies: The Effects of Statement 52 on Equity Analysts.[2]

Griffin is a Fellow of Chartered Accountants Australia and New Zealand and has been co-editor of the journal Accounting Horizons.[3]

Education

After completing his baccalaureate education at the Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand, Griffin moved from his birth country to the United States, where he completed his M.A. in Operations Research and Economic Theory in 1973 and earned his Ph.D. in accounting in 1974 from the Fisher College of Business at The Ohio State University.[1]

Career

Griffin began his academic career in 1974 as an assistant professor of accounting at Stanford University's Graduate School of Business. In 1981, he joined the University of California, Davis, as an associate professor of Management and founding faculty member of the newly formed UC Davis Graduate School of Management. He advanced to the position of Professor of Management in 1984. In 2017, the University of California, Davis, appointed him to the title of Distinguished Professor of Management. He also holds the position of Honorary Professor in the Department of Accounting and Finance at the University of Otago[4] and has been serving as a Distinguished Professor Emeritus at the Graduate School of Management, University of California, Davis.

Research

Griffin's publications in scientific journals have primarily focused on topics in accounting, capital market theory, financial reporting, and corporate disclosure.[5]

Quarterly earnings and market predictions

In his early research, Griffin studied the stochastic properties of quarterly earnings, comparing security analysts' and time-series models. He demonstrated that security analysts excel in forecasting due to their information use and timing advantage.[6] His 1977 investigation of the time-series behavior of quarterly earnings also revealed non-Martingale patterns and interdependencies.[7] In 1987, he studied the association between abnormal stock returns and multiple proxies for the market's assessment of unexpected quarterly earnings. This research revealed a potential measurement error interpretation in multiple regression tests of abnormal stock returns on unexpected earnings proxies and other variables, with varying effectiveness for different firm sizes and forecast periods.[8]

Accounting, auditing, and financial markets

Griffin's research has also explored various aspects of the implications of corporate reporting for auditing and investor decision-making, with an emphasis on how corporate reporting enhances services and outcomes for managers and stakeholders.[9] He examined the impact of financial metrics and analysts' forecasts on security returns, uncovering their role in investment decisions[10] and elucidated the relationships among audit fees, corporate governance, and audit quality under the Sarbanes-Oxley (SOX) legislation.[11] Together with William H. Beaver and others, he evaluated security price behavior in response to ASR 190, which required additional current cost information, revealing no significant benefits.[12] He also assessed audit fees post-SOX, identifying significant relations among audit risk, effort, and auditor changes, leading to increased risk and higher auditing costs for complex accounting systems.[13]

Market behavior, investor decision-making, and sustainability disclosures

Griffin has also investigated the role of short interest in credit markets, how sustainability disclosures impact stock prices, and whether investors' recognize potentially stranded assets on energy company balance sheets.[5] In particular, he assessed how the stock market responds to bond ratings, revealing that downgrades convey information to investors, whereas upgrades show varied returns.[14] Additionally, he analyzed investors’ responses to 10-K and 10-Q filings, highlighting strong reactions to 10-Ks and 10-Qs beyond the initial earnings announcement.[15] In later work, he identified that investors negatively price firms' greenhouse gas emissions, implying a significant equity discount for firms that disclosed emissions to the Carbon Disclosure Project.[16] By contrast, his research on voluntary CSR disclosure identified significant positive price effects for shareholders, particularly for smaller firms.[17] His analysis of the stock market's reaction to a 2009 Nature journal article on limited fossil fuel reserves showed only a moderate price drop for major U.S. oil and gas companies, with limited impact of the subsequent press coverage.[18] In an article on the content of lease disclosures, he took task with the Securities and Exchange Commission for favoring large institutional investors over others by promoting complex disclosures that few can understand.[19]

Extreme weather and climate change

Griffin's 2023 work examined how climate-change-related extreme weather events affected business performance, firm value, what companies told their shareholders, and the fees companies paid to their auditors. He established that companies disclose little about the impact of wildfires despite this being a growing environmental threat and a material concern for many companies.[20] Furthermore, he found that auditors charge higher fees when extreme weather impacts their clients,[21] and that stock markets are increasingly recognizing heat spells as a material risk factor, which is a threat to their market value. He has also studied whether investors distinguish between shareholder proposals on climate change that increase versus decrease firm value, finding investors are willing to accept lower returns for proposals designed to reduce carbon emissions or meet other sustainability objectives.[22] Taken together, this work has implications for disclosure regulators in deciding what should be reported to stakeholders on how firms contribute to climate change and how climate change affects firms.[23] Speaking to a broader audience, he has also published his work on climate change in Nature Energy.[24] [25]

Awards and honors

Bibliography

Selected books

Selected articles

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Paul A. Griffin | UC Davis Graduate School of Management. gsm.ucdavis.edu.
  2. The Effects of Foreign-Currency Translation Accounting on Security Analysts' Forecasts. Richard P. Castanias, II. Griffin, Paul A.. 1986. Managerial and Decision Economics. 7. 1. 3–10. 10.1002/mde.4090070103 . 2487379 . JSTOR.
  3. Web site: Accounting Horizons. June 10, 2023. Wikipedia.
  4. Web site: Professor Paul Griffin - University of Otago.
  5. Web site: Paul A. Griffin.
  6. Security Analyst Superiority Relative to Univariate Time-series Models in Forecasting Quarterly Earnings. Lawrence D.. Brown. Robert L.. Hagerman. Paul A.. Griffin. Mark E.. Zmijewski. April 1, 1987. Journal of Accounting and Economics. 9. 1. 61–87. ScienceDirect. 10.1016/0165-4101(87)90017-6. 154545329 .
  7. The Time-Series Behavior of Quarterly Earnings: Preliminary Evidence. Paul A.. Griffin. September 11, 1977. Journal of Accounting Research. 15. 1. 71–83. JSTOR. 10.2307/2490556. 2490556 .
  8. An Evaluation of Alternative Proxies for the Market's Assessment of Unexpected Earnings. Lawrence D.. Brown. Robert L.. Hagerman. Paul A.. Griffin. Mark E.. Zmijewski. July 1, 1987. Journal of Accounting and Economics. 9. 2. 159–193. ScienceDirect. 10.1016/0165-4101(87)90004-8. 153530862 .
  9. Commentaries on Big Data's Importance for Accounting and Auditing. Paul A.. Griffin. Arnold M.. Wright. June 1, 2015. Accounting Horizons. 29. 2. 377–379. 10.2308/acch-51066.
  10. Competitive Information in the Stock Market: An Empirical Study of Earnings, Dividends and Analysts' Forecasts. Paul A.. Griffin. September 11, 1976. The Journal of Finance. 31. 2. 631–650. JSTOR. 10.2307/2326631. 2326631 .
  11. Corporate Governance and Audit Fees: Evidence of Countervailing Relations. Paul A.. Griffin. David H.. Lont. Yuan. Sun. June 1, 2008. Journal of Contemporary Accounting & Economics. 4. 1. 18–49. ScienceDirect. 10.1016/S1815-5669(10)70028-X.
  12. The Information Content of SEC Accounting Series Release No. 190. William H.. Beaver. Andrew A.. Christie. Paul A.. Griffin. August 1, 1980. Journal of Accounting and Economics. 2. 2. 127–157. ScienceDirect. 10.1016/0165-4101(80)90009-9.
  13. An Analysis of Audit Fees Following the Passage of Sarbanes-Oxley. Paul A.. Griffin. David H.. Lont. August 11, 2007. Asia-Pacific Journal of Accounting & Economics. 14. 2. 161–192. CrossRef. 10.1080/16081625.2007.9720794. 54077651 .
  14. Common Stock Returns and Rating Changes: A Methodological Comparison. Paul A.. Griffin. Antonio Z.. Sanvicente. March 11, 1982. The Journal of Finance. 37. 1. 103–119. CrossRef. 10.1111/j.1540-6261.1982.tb01098.x.
  15. Got Information? Investor Response to Form 10-K and Form 10-Q EDGAR Filings. Paul A.. Griffin. December 1, 2003. Review of Accounting Studies. 8. 4. 433–460. Springer Link. 10.1023/A:1027351630866. 153242506 .
  16. The Relevance to Investors of Greenhouse Gas Emission Disclosures. Paul A.. Griffin. David H.. Lont. Estelle Y.. Sun. June 11, 2017. Contemporary Accounting Research. 34. 2. 1265–1297. CrossRef. 10.1111/1911-3846.12298.
  17. Going Green: Market Reaction to CSRwire News Releases. Paul A.. Griffin. Yuan. Sun. March 1, 2013. Journal of Accounting and Public Policy. 32. 2. 93–113. ScienceDirect. 10.1016/j.jaccpubpol.2013.02.002.
  18. Science and the Stock Market: Investors' Recognition of Unburnable Carbon. Paul A.. Griffin. Amy Myers. Jaffe. David H.. Lont. Rosa. Dominguez-Faus. December 1, 2015. Energy Economics. 52. 1–12. ScienceDirect. 10.1016/j.eneco.2015.08.028. 2015EneEc..52....1G . 17802485 .
  19. Clarification or Confusion: A Textual Analysis of ASC 842 Lease Transition Disclosures. Luminita. Enache. Paul A.. Griffin. Rucsandra. Moldovan. August 19, 2023. European Accounting Review. 1–32. CrossRef. 10.1080/09638180.2023.2244990. 261039879 .
  20. Threatened by wildfires: What Do Firms Disclose in Their 10-Ks?. Paul A.. Griffin. Yijing. Jiang. Estelle Y.. Sun. May 11, 2023. Journal of Business Finance & Accounting. 50. 5–6. 895–942. CrossRef. 10.1111/jbfa.12674. 235069350 .
  21. Web site: Weathering the Weather: Does Extreme Weather Affect the Cost of an Audit?. Paul A.. Griffin. Zhe (Michael). Guo. Estelle. Sun. June 12, 2023. Social Science Research Network. 10.2139/ssrn.3802059. 3802059 . 233686630 .
  22. Shareholder Activism on Climate Change: Evolution, Determinants, and Consequences. Ivan. Diaz-Rainey. Paul A.. Griffin. David H.. Lont. Antonio J.. Mateo-Márquez. Constancio. Zamora-Ramírez. September 4, 2023. Journal of Business Ethics. 193 . 3 . 481–510 . 10.1007/s10551-023-05486-x. free. 10072/425821. free.
  23. Extreme High Surface Temperature Events and Equity-related Physical Climate Risk. Paul. Griffin. David. Lont. Martien. Lubberink. December 1, 2019. Weather and Climate Extremes. 26. 100220. 10.1016/j.wace.2019.100220. free. 2019WCE....2600220G .
  24. Challenges for a Climate Risk Disclosure Mandate. Paul. Griffin. Amy Myers. Jaffe. January 11, 2022. Nature Energy. 7. 1. 2–4. 10.1038/s41560-021-00929-z. free. 2022NatEn...7....2G .
  25. Energy Finance Must Account for Extreme Weather Risk. Paul A.. Griffin. February 11, 2020. Nature Energy. 5. 2. 98–100. www.nature.com. 10.1038/s41560-020-0548-2. 2020NatEn...5...98G . 256705036 .