An Agent Based Framework for Assessing Risk Actionability in SEC Filings

preprint OA: closed CC-BY-4.0
🔓 Open OA copy View at publisher

Abstract

Risk factor disclosures in corporate filings are widely analyzed for their informational content, yet their usefulness for operational governance remains underexplored. This paper introduces risk actionability as a distinct concept from risk presence and proposes an interpretable, agent-based pipeline for assessing whether disclosed risks support intervention-oriented decisions. Operating at the paragraph level on SEC Form 10-K and 10-Q risk factors, the agent assigns risk attributes and maps disclosures to pass, review, or escalate states. We introduce the Intervention Load Index and Actionability Gap to quantify human oversight demand implied by disclosures. Empirical results show that disclosure severity does not reliably predict intervention needs, and that conservative disclosure styles can suppress actionable signals. A failure case highlights limitations arising from disclosure sparsity.

My notes (saved in your browser only)

Citation neighborhood (no data yet)

We don't have any in-corpus citations linked to this paper yet. This is a recent paper (2025) — citers typically take a year or two to land, and the OpenAlex reference graph may still be filling in.

Source provenance

europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-20T01:45:00.602351+00:00
unpaywall
last seen: 2026-06-05T02:00:03.366016+00:00
License: CC-BY-4.0