Are financial conflicts of interest leading to reporting error in academic literature ?
Souida, Fairouz
Promotor(s) :
Hambuckers, Julien
Date of defense : 1-Sep-2025/5-Sep-2025 • Permalink : http://hdl.handle.net/2268.2/24332
Details
| Title : | Are financial conflicts of interest leading to reporting error in academic literature ? |
| Author : | Souida, Fairouz
|
| Date of defense : | 1-Sep-2025/5-Sep-2025 |
| Advisor(s) : | Hambuckers, Julien
|
| Committee's member(s) : | Bruns, Stephan |
| Language : | English |
| Discipline(s) : | Business & economic sciences > Quantitative methods in economics & management |
| Institution(s) : | Université de Liège, Liège, Belgique |
| Degree: | Master en sciences de gestion, à finalité spécialisée en Banking and Asset Management |
| Faculty: | Master thesis of the HEC-Ecole de gestion de l'Université de Liège |
Abstract
[en] This thesis examines whether financial conflicts of interest (FCOI) contribute to reporting
errors in academic finance research. To this end, we analyze a dataset that flags statistical
tests for potential errors. Probit regressions are employed to test the relationship between COI
disclosures and the likelihood of errors.
Descriptive comparisons showed nearly identical error rates for studies with and without
financial conflicts of interest. Baseline probit regressions suggested a small positive
association between FCOIs and strong reporting errors, though this effect weakened once
inverse class weighting was applied to account for the rarity of errors. The signal proved
fragile across alternative specifications, raising doubts about its robustness.
The findings therefore provide no strong support for the hypothesis that FCOIs are associated
with reporting errors. Instead, structural factors such as larger author teams and publication in
higher-ranked journals appeared more consistently linked to lower error rates.
Overall, the findings suggest that FCOI does not systematically affect reporting reliability,
while emphasizing the methodological challenges of studying rare events in research
integrity.
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