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Rev Fin 1995; 8:743-771
© 1995 the Society for Financial Studies


Article

Corporate incentives for hedging and hedge accounting

PM DeMarzo1 and D Duffie2
1 Kellogg Graduate School of Management, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL 60028, USA
2 Stanford University, Stanford, USA

Abstract

This article explores the information effect of financial risk management. Financial hedging improves the informativeness of corporate earnings as a signal of management ability and project quality by eliminating extraneous noise. Managerial and shareholder incentives regarding information transmission may differ, however, leading to conflicts regarding an optimal hedging policy. We show that these incentives depend on the accounting information made available by the firm. Under some circumstances, if hedge transactions are not disclosed (i.e., firms report only aggregate earnings), managers hedge to achieve greater risk reduction than they would if full disclosure were required. In these cases, it is optimal for shareholders to request only aggregate accounting reports.


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