Shyam V. Sunder
- Director, School of Accountancy
- Professor, Accounting
- Member of the Graduate Faculty
Contact
- (520) 621-2146
- McClelland Hall, Rm. 301
- Tucson, AZ 85721
- shyamvsunder@arizona.edu
Awards
- Honorable mention for teaching excellence
- Evening MBA program, Spring 2019
- Dean's Award
- Spring 2015
- Karl Eller Summer grant
- Summer 2014
Interests
No activities entered.
Courses
2024-25 Courses
-
Dissertation
ACCT 920 (Spring 2025) -
Research Design
ACCT 797A (Spring 2025) -
Dissertation
ACCT 920 (Fall 2024) -
Financial Accounting Sem
ACCT 696D (Fall 2024) -
Honors Thesis
ACCT 498H (Fall 2024) -
Intro to Fin & Managerial Acct
ACCT 542 (Fall 2024) -
Research Design
ACCT 797A (Fall 2024)
2023-24 Courses
-
Dissertation
ACCT 920 (Spring 2024) -
Honors Thesis
ACCT 498H (Spring 2024) -
Intro to Fin & Managerial Acct
ACCT 542 (Spring 2024) -
Research Design
ACCT 797A (Spring 2024) -
Dissertation
ACCT 920 (Fall 2023) -
Honors Thesis
ACCT 498H (Fall 2023) -
Intro to Fin & Managerial Acct
ACCT 542 (Fall 2023) -
Research Design
ACCT 797A (Fall 2023)
2022-23 Courses
-
Adv Financial Acct Thry
ACCT 682 (Spring 2023) -
Dissertation
ACCT 920 (Spring 2023) -
Honors Thesis
ACCT 498H (Spring 2023) -
Research
ACCT 900 (Spring 2023) -
Dissertation
ACCT 920 (Fall 2022) -
Honors Thesis
ACCT 498H (Fall 2022) -
Research Design
ACCT 797A (Fall 2022)
2021-22 Courses
-
Financial Statement Analysis
ACCT 551 (Summer I 2022) -
Adv Financial Acct Thry
ACCT 682 (Spring 2022) -
Dissertation
ACCT 920 (Spring 2022) -
Research Design
ACCT 797A (Spring 2022) -
Dissertation
ACCT 920 (Fall 2021) -
Research Design
ACCT 797A (Fall 2021)
2020-21 Courses
-
Inter Financial Acct I
ACCT 400B (Fall 2020) -
Inter Financial Acct II
ACCT 500B (Fall 2020) -
Intro Financial Acct
ACCT 540 (Fall 2020)
2019-20 Courses
-
Intro Financial Acct
ACCT 540 (Fall 2019)
2018-19 Courses
-
Intro Financial Acct
ACCT 540 (Fall 2018)
2017-18 Courses
-
Adv Financial Acct Thry
ACCT 682 (Spring 2018) -
Intro Financial Acct
ACCT 540 (Fall 2017)
2016-17 Courses
-
Adv Financial Acct Thry
ACCT 682 (Spring 2017)
2015-16 Courses
-
Adv Financial Acct Thry
ACCT 682 (Spring 2016) -
Intro Financial Acct
ACCT 540 (Spring 2016)
Scholarly Contributions
Journals/Publications
- Sunder, S., Bushee, B., & Goodman, T. (2019). Financial reporting quality, investment horizon, and institutional investor trading strategies. The Accounting Review, 94(3), 87-112.
- Sunder, J., Sunder, S., & Zhang, J. (2018). Balance Sheet Conservatism and Debt Contracting. Contemporary Accounting Research, 35(1), 494-524. doi:https://doi.org/10.1111/1911-3846.12356More infoWe study the role of borrowers’ balance sheet conservatism (i.e., conservatism in asset values) in debt contract design. We find that borrowing costs are decreasing in the degree of balance sheet conservatism, and this effect is stronger for firms with lower credit quality. This is consistent with balance sheet conservatism reducing lenders’ uncertainty about the liquidation value of assets, thus facilitating the ex ante screening of borrowers. We predict that better ex ante screening also reduces the need for ex post monitoring, and find that balance sheet conservatism is associated with less restrictive covenant terms. Further, we find that asymmetric timeliness in earnings is associated with lower borrowing costs only when balance sheet conservatism is not high. This result suggests that lenders appear to recognize the constraining effect of high balance sheet conservatism on future conservatism in earnings.
- Sunder, S., Sunder, J., & Zhang, J. (2018). Balance Sheet Conservatism and Debt Contracting. Contemporary Accounting Research, 35(1), 494-524. doi:https://doi.org/10.1111/1911-3846.12356
- Sunder, J., Sunder, J., Sunder, S. V., Sunder, S. V., Zhang, J., & Zhang, J. (2017). Pilot CEOs and corporate innovation. Journal of Financial Economics, 123(1), 209-224. doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jfineco.2016.11.002
- Sunder, J., Sunder, S. V., & Zhang, J. (2017). Pilot CEOs and corporate innovation. Journal of Financial Economics.
- Sunder, S. V., Srivastava, A., & Tse, S. (2015). Timely loss recognition and termination of unprofitable projects. China Journal of Accounting Research.
- Sunder, S. V., Sunder, J., & Zhang, J. (2014). Debtholder responses to shareholder activism: Evidence from hedge fund interventions. Review of Financial Studies.
- Bharath, S. T., Sunder, J., & Sunder, S. V. (2008). Accounting Quality and Debt Contracting. The Accounting Review, 83(1), 1-28.
- Bharath, S. T., Sunder, J., & Sunder, S. V. (2008). Accounting quality and debt contracting. Accounting Review, 83(1), 1-28.More infoAbstract: We study the role of borrower accounting quality in debt contracting. Specifically, we examine how accounting quality affects the borrower's choice of private versus public debt market and how the design of debt contracts vary with accounting quality in the two markets. We find that accounting quality affects the choice of the market, with poorer accounting quality borrowers preferring private debt, i.e., bank loans. This is consistent with banks possessing superior information access and processing abilities that reduce adverse selection costs for borrowers. We also find that accounting quality has an economically significant but differential impact on contract design in the two markets consistent with differences in recontracting flexibility across the two markets. In the case of private debt, since there is greater recontracting flexibility, both the price (i.e., interest) and non-price (i.e., maturity and collateral) terms are significantly more stringent for poorer accounting quality borrowers, unlike public debt where only the price terms are more stringent. The impact of accounting quality on interest spreads of public debt is 2.5 times that of the private debt, since the price terms alone reflect the variation in accounting quality.
- Cohen, D. A., Dey, A., Lys, T. Z., & Sunder, S. V. (2007). Earnings announcement premia and the limits to arbitrage. Journal of Accounting and Economics, 43(2-3), 153-180.More infoAbstract: We examine the factors underlying the presence of earnings announcement premia. We find that the premia persist beyond the sample period examined in prior studies (ending in 1988), although they decline in magnitude after 1988. Further, premia are lower on the expected than the actual earnings announcement dates. We document that increases in voluntary disclosures result in lower premia, despite the increase in return volatility over time. Finally, our evidence suggests that the premia are not completely eliminated because of the costs of arbitrage. © 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
- Ertimur, Y., Sunder, J., & Sunder, S. V. (2007). Measure for measure: The relation between forecast accuracy and recommendation profitability of analysts. Journal of Accounting Research, 45(3), 567-606.More infoAbstract: We examine the contemporaneous relation between earnings forecast accuracy and recommendation profitability to assess the effectiveness with which analysts translate forecasts into profitable recommendations. We find that, after controlling for expertise, more accurate analysts make more profitable recommendations, albeit only for firms with value-relevant earnings. Next, we show that conflicts of interest from investment banking activities affect the relation between accuracy and profitability. In the case of buy recommendations, more accurate forecasts are associated with more profitable recommendations only for the nonconflicted analysts. For hold recommendations, higher levels of accuracy are associated with higher levels of profitability for conflicted analysts, provided these recommendations are treated as sells. Finally, we find that regulatory reforms aimed at mitigating analyst conflicts of interest appear to have improved the relation between accuracy and profitability. Specifically, the integrity of buy and hold recommendations has improved and the change is more pronounced for analysts expected to be most conflicted. Copyright ©, University of Chicago.
- Mohanram, P. S., & Sunder, S. V. (2006). How has regulation FD affected the operations of financial analysts?. Contemporary Accounting Research, 23(2), 491-525.More infoAbstract: In this paper, we analyze how financial analysts generate information, make decisions about firm coverage, and try to maintain their forecasting accuracy after the passage of Regulation Fair Disclosure ("Reg FD"). Using the model developed by Barron, Kim, Lim, and Stevens 1998, we find that analysts are investing more effort in idiosyncratic information discovery. In order to do this, individual analysts appear to be reducing coverage for well-followed firms while increasing coverage of firms that were less followed prior to Reg FD. Analysts who had preferential links with firms that they covered, such as analysts from large brokerage houses, tend to have greater forecast accuracy in the pre-FD period. However, these analysts are unable to sustain their forecasting superiority in the post-FD period, which suggests that there has been a leveling of the information playing field among analysts. Overall, our results reflect a trend toward greater reliance on idiosyncratic information discovery on part of the financial analysts. © CAAA.