Sujesh Nambiar joined Grenoble Ecole de Management as an Assistant Professor of Accounting after receiving his PhD in Management with a specialization in Accounting and Control from INSEAD.
Sujesh’s research focuses on the economic role of financial reporting quality and disclosure in financial intermediation. His research interests also include bank accounting, price informativeness in capital markets and fundamental analysis. His teaching interests include Financial Accounting, Financial Statement Analysis and Firm Valuation.
Prior to his move to academia, Sujesh was a consultant with McKinsey & Company and has worked with clients in multiple countries across Asia, Middle East and Europe. He also holds a Post Graduate Diploma in Business Management and a Bachelor of Technology degree in Mechanical Engineering.
- Economic role of financial reporting and disclosure in financial intermediation, bank accounting, price informativeness in capital markets, and fundamental analysis
- Accounting and Financial Statements Analysis - Master - De 2020 à 2024
- Basics of Finance - Master - De 2020 à 2024
- Financial Statement Analysis - Master - De 2020 à 2024
- Fan G., Joos P., Monahan S., Nambiar S., 2023.Financial Reporting and the Accuracy of the Forecasts Embedded in Equity PricesINSEAD Accounting Symposium, INSEAD, Paris, France
- Fan G., Joos P., Monahan S., Nambiar S. P., 2019.Evaluating price informativeness and its determinantsAmerican Accounting Association Annual Meeting, 2019, American Accounting Association, San Francisco, United States of AmericaWe develop a price informativeness measure that reflects the accuracy of investors’ forecasts of future earnings embedded in current price. We then empirically evaluate economy- and firm-level price informativeness. Investors’ forecasts of economy-level earnings are more optimistic (pessimistic) when sentiment is positive (negative). Their forecasts are more biased and more imprecise when sentiment is extreme, and especially when it is negative and extreme. Firm-level prices are less informative when: (i) uncertainty is high; (ii) analyst following is low; (iii) the firm provides highly aggregated accounting data; and, (iv) a large fraction of the firm’s shares is held by retail investors.
